Kafka's Metamorphosis

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Theory Paper: Freud and Kafka’s The Metamorphosis
An analysis of The Metamorphosis using Freud’s theoretical framework of the human psyche

Literary theory1, defined as the systematic study of the nature of literature and methods of analysis, helps develop an overall context in which philosophical and social perspectives can be applied on recurrent literary themes in order to better understand and analyse a literary text. In this paper, Freud’s theory of the Uncanny2, and his structural model of the psyche3, have been applied to The Metamorphosis (1915)4 in order to explain and analyse the literary theory - text interaction. According to his model of the psyche, the id is the set of uncoordinated instinctual trends; the super-ego plays the …show more content…

The story opens with "When Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams…" (Kafka 1). The words “waking”, “dream” and “bed”, can possibly imply that Gregor wakes but by this awaking, in fact, he transfers from the conscious to the unconscious world - the world of dream. This coldness, an attribute of unconscious world, is also mentioned: “…the contact felt like a cold shower all over him” (Kafka 5). This dream-like state is further reinforced by Kafka’s references to the weather since frosty, dark, and cloudy weather can be seen as attributes of Samsa’s mind. For instance, “Gregor’s glance then turned to the window. The dreary weather made him quite melancholy…” (Kafka …show more content…

Gregor's sister has by this time, also castrated him. She now "considers herself an expert in Gregor's affairs against her parents…and of self-confidence that she has recently developed so unexpectedly and at such cost (his manhood)…" (Kafka 55) His father has regained his role as provider and even his mother and sister have found jobs, emasculating whatever ideals were left within Gregor. The mother and sister have become more intimate with the father, who has now regained a certain starch and stiffness, from his collar to his posture; Gregor’s mother "…whispering endearments...” (Kafka 70) in his father’s ears, and unlike Gregor, the father is being helped up bed. When Gregor had supported them, he was left along to sleep in hotel rooms or play with his jigsaw. Gregor’s desolation and helplessness is summed as such: "sat cheek by cheek- when his mother, pointing toward his room, said "Shut that door now, Grete…" (Kafka 70)and he was again the lonely voyeur, with only his imagination as his

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