Franz Kafka’s
short story, “Before the Law,” can be read using a variety of different
literary theories and criticisms. Two specific ways it can be read are through
a Marxist lens, and through a psychological lens. While both readings are valid
in their own ways, the Marxist one seems to be much more convincing in this
case.
When summarizing
“Before the Law,” my group tried to analyze it according to the conventions of
Marxist literary theory. As the story’s premise is that of a “man from the
country” trying to gain access to something he feels he has a natural right too,
while a guard who is clearly of a higher social class than he prevents him from
doing so, this seems to be a fairly valid reading. My group thoroughly
discussed the possibility that the plot of the story was in actuality a
metaphor meant to criticize way authorities treat the less fortunate when they come
to them desiring justice. Accordingly, we took the word “Law” from the title to
quite literally mean the law, as in the set of rules and protections a society upholds
for all of its peoples. One
important detail to note is that this story was written around the turn of the
20th century when the inequality between social classes was much
greater than it is today. While the rich could afford things like lawyers and
other legal help in order to get past the “gatekeepers”, who could be metaphors
for various legal situations and processes, the poor of the time could not and
would have to face much greater adversity when trying to make their way through
the same trials, often having their efforts amount to absolutely nothing. This is
reflected in the story when the countryman “spends everything, no
matter how valuable, to win over the gatekeeper” and only receives
passing responses in return. In the end the countryman has what little chance
he had of accessing the law closed off to him after becoming an old man, which
my group theorized as society abandoning him because he has nothing left of
value and moving on while he is forever stuck where he is due to his social
status, never getting what he rightfully deserves. Given the overwhelming
amount of evidence presented in this text that leans towards it, it feels
almost as though Kafka intended this story to be read with a Marxist viewpoint
in mind.
Another way one
could summarize this story would be from a psychological standpoint. In this
case the term “Law” can be taken to have a much more figurative meaning then in
the former. Perhaps the law could refer to a certain goal or way of life the
countryman desires to reach; yet that is held back from him by societies
standards, or in this situation, the gatekeepers. The gatekeepers may also be
the trials he has to face in order to arrive at his goal, which, in what could
be a criticism of people who clearly desire something yet do not have the will
to face the challenges on the path to obtain it, the man backs down from after
learning of their difficulty, instead meandering about and looking for an
easier path to grab it from. In this case the beginning of the last sentence of
the story, “Here no one else can gain entry,” would make a lot sense
as it is his life alone that the countryman had the ability to take control of,
yet didn’t because of his unwillingness to face what lay before him. This
theory feels like much more of a stretch than the Marxist one though as a lot
of the evidence seems more circumstantial and it feels like a reading that
comes from more modern point of view rather than one that came about at the
turn of the century.
All in all, the themes and circumstances surrounding the
text as well as the plot presented within it seem to lead to the Marxist theory
much more smoothly than they do to the psychological reading. Because of this
it would probably be better to come at this story with a Marxist viewpoint in
mind.
I noticed that only a few people in our class discussed this article through the psychological lens. Your interpretation of the sentence "Here no one else can gain entry" inspired me a lot. If we only use Marxist criticism to analyze this article, that sentence makes no sense at all. Through the psychological view, If we interpret the law as the goal of the man's life, it's easier to understand the abstract meaning of the last sentence the gatekeeper said to the man.
ReplyDeleteYour sentence structure and flow were both excellent in my opinion. You also made a connection in your discussion of Marxism about the lack of lawyers for the poor that I did not think of and I am now convinced that that is one of the points Kafka was trying to make. However, I did think that your conclusion could have been a little longer and tied your points together in a better way. That being said, your post was a good read and opened my eyes to some new points I had not yet considered.
ReplyDelete