Metamorphosis Existentialism Analysis

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After years of metaphorically playing the role of a bug within his family, Gregor awakes as an actual repulsive dung beetle, further alienating himself from his family in Franz Kafka’s novella Metamorphosis. As an existentialist piece of literature, the novella contains themes regarding existence and self-discovery as the main character begins to understand the meaning of his life, conveying the importance of personal choice. Existentialism explores the individual and that individual’s reason for existence. Ultimately, the movement focuses on “personal existence” and challenges revolving around an individual who then has “freedom and responsibility” to make a choice (Solomon). When Gregor faces his situation of becoming a giant dung beetle in Metamorphosis, he learns the truth about his position in his family. His own father, learning about his son’s transformation, drives Gregor back into his room, “stamping his foot at him as he went” (Kafka I). For …show more content…

Through being “incarcerated his room” (Kafka II), Gregor begins to analyze his personal existence and confinement. From his job, Gregor acquires the habit of locking his doors, a habit that subsists “even when he [is] at home” (Kafka I). Existentialists reject the “submersion” of individuals into “larger public groups or forces” and believe “moments of unique self-recognition” facilitate self-discovery, specifically “when one faces one's own death” (Solomon). As a slowly rotting, starving, injured dung beetle, Gregor faces death by himself. In his last moments, he experiences “empty and peaceful rumination” (Kafka III) before dying. In the brief, quiet moment before his death, Gregor understands himself and his family, ultimately choosing to die alone in peace. This choice of his to leave the world demonstrates existentialist emphasis on the freedom of choice, which only results after Gregor finds meaning in

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