Franz Kafka's letters to Phyllis Bauer, his fiancée, reveal that he only needed 20 days to finish "The Metamorphosis," between November 17 and December 7, 1912.
But the book’s significance far outlasts the duration of its creation; indeed, it has been discussed and dissected in literary circles for more than a century.
Over time, the abundance of critical writings on well-known works of fiction has created a sense of confusion, hindering our understanding of them. This includes “The Metamorphosis”, which has been explored by countless writers, from Walter Benjamin, Borges and Gilles Deleuze to Georges Bataille and Milan Kundera. Thus, the Kafka school was born – an aesthetic doctrine, of sorts, involving both novels and short stories.
But there is a misconception that widely read texts can be fully understood after reading them once or twice.
These timeless classics are instead born and reborn before us, renewing their impact every time we revisit them. They bleed beyond the pages of the eras that they emerge from, and they become current and futuristic, all at once.