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Franz Kafka, from the Metamorphosis (1915)
Franz Kafka (1883–1924) was born in Prague, Czechoslovakia, to a middle-class Jewish family. His works are often characterized as expressing the essential alienation of the human condition at the beginning of the twentieth century. His experience of tuberculosis played a key role in the cultivation of his distinctive absurdist fictional style, in which characters suffer profoundly from social neglect. The excerpt here from one of his most celebrated stories, The Metamorphosis, demonstrates his profound identification with individuals whose divergent bodies and minds result in their isolation from the rest of society. Kafka spent his final years moving in and out of sanatoriums that were often indicative of the impersonal bureaucracies of modern life that he critiqued.
As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect. He was lying on his hard, as it were armor-plated, back and when he lifted his head a little he could see his domelike brown belly divided into stiff arched segments on top of which the bed quilt could hardly stay in place and was about to slide off completely. His numerous legs, which were pitifully thin compared to the rest of his bulk, waved helplessly before his eyes….
First of all he wanted to get up quietly, without any excitement; get dressed; and, the main thing, have breakfast, and only then think about what to do next, for he saw clearly that in bed he would never think things through to a rational conclusion. He remembered how even in the past he had often felt some kind of slight pain, possibly caused by lying in an uncomfortable position, which, when he got up, turned out to be purely imaginary, and he was eager to see how today's fantasy would gradually fade away. That the change in his voice was nothing more than the first sign of a bad cold, an occupational ailment of the traveling salesman, he had no doubt in the least.
It was very easy to throw off the cover; all he had to do was puff himself up a little, and it fell off by itself. But after this, things got difficult, especially since he was so unusually broad. He would have needed hands and arms to lift himself up, but instead of that he had only his numerous little legs, which were in every different kind of perpetual motion and which, besides, he could not control. If he wanted to bend one, the first thing that happened was that it stretched itself out; and if he finally succeeded in getting this leg to do what he wanted, all the others in the meantime, as if set free, began to work in the most intensely painful agitation. “Just don't stay in bed being useless,” Gregor said to himself.
First he tried to get out of bed with the lower part of his body, but this lower part—which by the way he had not seen yet and which he could not form a clear picture of—proved too difficult to budge; it was taking so long; and when finally, almost out of his mind, he lunged forward with all his force, without caring, he had picked the wrong direction and slammed himself violently against the lower bedpost, and the searing pain he felt taught him exactly the lower part of his body was, for the moment anyway, the most sensitive.
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