Transgressive Body: A Comparative Study of Franz Kafka’s “The Metamorphosis” and Philip Roth’s The Breast
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Department of English
Abstract
To read Franz Kafka’s“The Metamorphosis”and Philip Roth’sThe Breastis
to decode the meaning of transgressive body in postmodern perspective which Kafka
articulates by transforming the protagonist Gregor Samsa into contemptuous beetle
whereas Roth portrays David Kepesh in the form of dislocated female breast.The
change in physical body of the protagonistssurprises the reader.Yet, through the
mentalconsciousness, cognitive capacity and linguisticunderstandinginthe
protagonists,weexperience the narrative events andknow that they are human
beings.The significance of theanti-evolutionary process in the metamorphosis of the
protagonists lies in its violation of the culturally encoded meaning of the ‘body’ and
human subjectivity. Thus, by redrawing the concept of ‘body’, Kafka and Roth blur
the deeply rooted hierarchy like human/ non human (animal), male/female,
subject/object, mind/body and inside/outside.Kafka’s concern is about human and
animal bipolarity whereas Roth anticipates dominant dichotomy inherent in gender
meaning. In this regard, Kafka in terms of trans-physicalityviolates anthropocentric
definition of human body and Roth brings trans-sexuality in the domain of gender
meaning. However, they in common with the portrayal of metamorphosis, explore
human complexity, absurdity and fragmentation in better way.
