Gregor’s mind, in actuality, is in touch truly much with his humanity than other characters might think in the book. On page 45, Kafka presented Gregor enjoying the violin playing by his sister. “Was he an animal if music stirred him that way?” Kafka …show more content…
As if his personality was completely absent, his family treated Gregor like he wasn’t there anymore. They didn’t behave gratifying towards him. “No longer reflecting about what might give Gregor some special pleasure,” Kafka writes, “his sister now hastily shoved any old food into Gregor’s room with her foot not before running off to work in the morning and at noon; in the evening, not caring whether the food had perhaps been just merely tasted or…” (41) His sister no longer had concern for Gregor; therefore, his food was disagreeable, and his room was dirty. His family didn’t even want to admit that the bug was Gregor because his sister didn’t covet them to call “it” Gregor. On page 23, his mother passes out when she first discerns him as a bug. They had a mother and son bond that was very close, and now that bond is demolished because she doesn’t perceive her son any longer since he is a bug. Consequently, they all had the idea that Gregor was this foul creature. To summarize, in the book The Metamorphosis, Kafka brings a message to the audience claiming to not adjudicate people’s image, but their intellect instead. He uses Gregor as an example. Through so much he has been put in. He writes out Gregor’s reactions and thoughts to every situation that goes