How significant can a picture\n of a woman in fur be when you try to hold it dear as the only resemblance\n left to human life? When Gregor Samsa\n wakes up in his bed, he is aghast to find himself transformed into a giant\n bug. He is now to spend the rest of his life in that state. Life to him\n becomes a struggle to align his lingering humanity and his transformed\n physicality. Thus begins Metamorphosis. Delving into absurdity of life, the\n disconnect between the mind and body and limits of sympathy, the book has\n been cited as one of the seminal works of twentieth-century fiction.
Franz Kafka (1883?1924) was born into a German-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Bohemia (now in the Czech Republic). His father was a middle-class businessman, an extremely domineering parent who disapproved of Kafka?s fondness for literature. His mother Julie was better educated than his father. Kafka obtained the degree of Doctor of Law in 1906 and worked for a year as a law clerk for the civil and criminal courts. From 1908?1922, he worked with the Worker?s Accident Insurance Institute for the Kingdom of Bohemia. His influential works (originally written in the German) such as the novels The Trial (1925) in which a man is charged with an unnamed offence, and The Metamorphosis (1915) in which the hero is transformed into an insect, mirror the alienation and anxiety experienced by many in the 20th century. Kafka allowed very few of his writings to be published while he was alive. Most of his critically lauded novels and stories appeared in print only after his death. He became an important figure of German and world literature when his close friend and literary executor, Max Brod, refused to destroy his novels, diaries and letters upon his death, as was instructed by Kafka.
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