Sunday, March 3, 2019
Kafkaââ¬â¢s Metamorphosis and Darwinian Theory
Reading Franz Kafkas The Metamorphosis, one is inclined to think that possibly the writer had Darwin in mind when he wrote the fabrication. The story centers on the innovation of its protagonist, Gregor Samsa, and his familys journey of survival through it. At the heart of the story resounds Darwins theory of the evolution of the species that organisms change and evolve in roll to resist, that the ultimate game is the survival of the fittest.Gregors transformation precipitated two struggles to survive his admit as a giant razz, and his familys. It could be that Kafka was thinking on the lines of the essential Darwinian concepts organisms change to cope, and that organisms adapt to the changes in their environment in guild to survive. In the story, Gregor wakes up as a giant bug with show up his knowing or ever finding out the reason for his transformation. He was a traveling sales objet dart, and was the familys breadwinner he takes care of his aging parents and jr. sist er, pays attain his fathers debts on top of addressing the familys ask like rent and groceries.He was dissatisfied with his work but he is force to confirm at it to support his family. He dreams of eventually finding a better chew over as soon as he pays off his fathers debts. He devotes much of his time working sacrificing his own needs and desires, having no time to pursue his own interests or to sustain any lasting or satisfying relationships. Perhaps his transformation was subconsciously desired that Gregor wanted more than what his current life offered, and it was his subconscious fashion to show what he felt inside him, a human universe tr decimateed like an insect, dehumanized by the demands of work and family life, struggling to keep a bit of humanity he still has left. As in Darwins theory, it is not that organisms transformed themselves in an instant, but rather agnise their needs and wants and developed the elbow room to achieve those.Whatever the reasons behi nd Gregors transformation, what is send away is that Gregor and his family both struggled to live after it happened. Gregor, having accepted the fact that his body has changed and that in order to can about he will have to turn back used to it, worked at moving his limbs to walk and move around. It was difficult to move around with new body, but he managed to learn how to, he call for to. Further, he and his family learned that with his new form, he could no longer eat the food that he used to enjoy, and that his dietary needs have changed. Whereas when he was human he wanted fresh foods, now he finds out that he is repulsed by it and can only eat rotting left-overs.The family, too, struggled with Gregors transformation. First, they cannot bear to see him as an insect, and more than that, they were worried about their pecuniary situation. Although in Gregors eyes the father was but an old man who has not worked for five years and is entitled to a retirement of leisure, and his baffle a frail woman who has asthma, and his younger sister a affair of beauty whose life has been so protected and pampered, and perhaps the family saw themselves the alike(p) way, but nevertheless, under their present circumstances they found it in them to stand firm for themselves.The father found work as a bank messenger, the return sewed lingerie for an apparel shop, and the sister became a salesgirl and analyse French and shorthand to find a better paying job in the future. Moreover, they also took in boarders to increase their income. They found that they could survive by themselves when they had to, that they did not really need Gregor they adapted to the situation in order to live.In the end, Kafkas The Metamorphosis is a story that chronicles mans means and ways of survival, as he has done so all throughout history transforming into what he is today. In a way, it could be seen as a tribute to the principles that Drawin espoused in his theory of the evolution of speci es that organisms, man above all, will adapt just to live, and that only those who are the fittest will survive.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment