La Métamorphose

, #5882

Paperback, 144 pages

French language

Published Jan. 1, 2015 by Gallimard.

ISBN:
978-2-07-046287-2
Copied ISBN!
(4 reviews)

Première parution en 1938 Édition et trad. de l'allemand (Autriche) par Claude David. Préface de Claude David

« Lorsque Gregor Samsa s'éveilla un matin au sortir de rêves agités, il se retrouva dans son lit changé en un énorme cancrelat. [...] "Que m'est-il arrivé ?" pensa-t-il. Ce n'était pas un rêve. [...] "Et si je continuais un peu à dormir et oubliais toutes ces bêtises", pensa-t-il, mais cela était tout à fait irréalisable, car il avait coutume de dormir sur le côté droit et il lui était impossible, dans son état actuel, de se mettre dans cette position. Il avait beau se jeter de toutes ses forces sur le côté droit, il rebondissait sans cesse sur le dos. »

63 editions

Behind the Locked Door – My Uneasy Reading of Kafka’s The Metamorphosis

Reading Franz Kafka’s The Metamorphosis was for me an unsettling journey into alienation and the fragility of human bonds. The story begins abruptly: Gregor Samsa, a traveling salesman, wakes one morning to find himself transformed into a monstrous insect. What struck me most was not the transformation itself, but how quickly the narrative shifts to the reactions of those around him—his family’s fear, shame, and eventual rejection.

As I followed Gregor’s slow decline, I felt both compassion and horror. His initial concern for work deadlines, even in his grotesque state, revealed the crushing grip of duty and habit. Yet, as the days passed, his world shrank to the walls of his room, and I could almost feel the suffocating isolation closing in on me as well.

The family’s responses unsettled me deeply. Their shift from pity to burden, and finally to cold detachment, felt like a cruel mirror of how …

reviewed The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka

Ruined by weird sexism at the end

Content warning Brief mention of a couple of plot points

avatar for jessica

rated it

Subjects

  • novel
  • fantastique