13,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
7 °P sammeln
  • Gebundenes Buch

Un matin ordinaire, Gregor Samsa se réveille dans son lit transformé en un monstrueux insecte. Enfermé dans sa chambre, rejeté par sa famille, il sombre peu à peu dans l'oubli et l'isolement. À travers cette fable troublante et absurde, Franz Kafka explore la solitude, la culpabilité, l'aliénation et la perte d'identité. Écrite dans un style froid et précis, La Métamorphose est l'une des uvres les plus emblématiques de la littérature du XXe siècle - une réflexion dérangeante sur la condition humaine et la cruauté du quotidien.

Produktbeschreibung
Un matin ordinaire, Gregor Samsa se réveille dans son lit transformé en un monstrueux insecte. Enfermé dans sa chambre, rejeté par sa famille, il sombre peu à peu dans l'oubli et l'isolement. À travers cette fable troublante et absurde, Franz Kafka explore la solitude, la culpabilité, l'aliénation et la perte d'identité. Écrite dans un style froid et précis, La Métamorphose est l'une des uvres les plus emblématiques de la littérature du XXe siècle - une réflexion dérangeante sur la condition humaine et la cruauté du quotidien.
Autorenporträt
Franz Kafka (1883-1924) A German-speaking insurance clerk, Franz Kafka preferred to spend his time writing. One of the most important writers of the Modernist period, Kafka's writings went against the conventions of his time. His works are notable for the aspects of the absurd, the surreal, and the fantastic. Although he incorporates elements of realism in his writing, many of his texts and protagonists engage with the loss of all coherent structures and meanings. It is common for the character to come across as an alienated individual, almost shunned from society. Over the years, his writing style has developed an identity of its own and is, today, widely known as 'Kafkaesque'. Kafka never intended to publish his works. In fact, he had ordered his friend to burn all of his unpublished works after his death. However, his friend published these works posthumously. Kafka's best-known works include The Trial, Metamorphosis, and The Castle. Kafka's works, more often than not, show a bleak and hopeless world where a just society and governance is more a matter of imagination than reality. He compels his readers to question the monotony of the systems around them, and the structures of authority.