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From Kafka to the streets: India’s unemployed subvert the insect metaphor

By Prof Hemantkumar Shah 
Franz Kafka’s 1915 masterpiece, The Metamorphosis, opens with one of the most jarring lines in world literature: Gregor Samsa, a traveling salesman, wakes up to find himself transformed into a monstrous insect. Samsa’s tragedy lies not just in his sudden physical grotesque form, but in his subsequent alienation. He becomes unemployed, a financial burden, and an object of deep disgust to his own family. He struggles to cling to his fading human memories before ultimately choosing to starve himself to death in isolation. 
Kafka used this absurdist nightmare to expose the crushing weight of modern capitalist society, where an individual's worth is entirely tied to their economic utility, and where the unable-to-work are swiftly discarded.
​Fast forward over a century, and Kafka’s literary insect has undergone a startling, deeply political reincarnation on the Indian landscape. This modern mutation was triggered by an extraordinary moment in the higher judiciary, where a chilling parallel was drawn between the nation's vast army of unemployed youth and the very pests Kafka wrote about. 
Awakening to a morning reality where their existence was trivialized as mere infestation, India's educated, jobless youth found themselves staring into the same mirror of alienation that drove Gregor Samsa to despair.
​Yet, this is where the Indian adaptation fiercely diverges from the German original. Unlike Samsa, who retreated into darkness and quietly surrendered to his fate, India’s "Cockroach Janata Party"—a metaphorical collective born from systemic neglect—refuses to die by suicide. Instead of absorbing the shame of their condition, these millions of young people have subverted the insult. 
The cockroach, typically an object of revulsion destined for the business end of a broom or a blast of pesticide, has been repurposed as a defiant symbol of political and economic rebellion.
​There is an eerie, fascinating poetry to this resistance. Just as real cockroaches emerge from the shadows when darkness falls, these unemployed citizens have poured into the public square, operating day and night. They require no divine incarnation, no political messiah, and no corporate motivational speakers to guide them. 
Their catalyst is their shared economic displacement. They have looked at the political and economic gutters of the nation and decided that their constitutional duty is not to hide within them, but to clean them out.
​When Kafka penned his novella 111 years ago, he was capturing the profound existential loneliness of the modern worker. Today, the collective anger of India’s youth has turned that solitary despair into a loud, organized demand for structural change. 
Franz Kafka has indeed been reborn in India—not in the quiet pages of a literary journal, but in the noisy, volatile, and unapologetic theater of mass politics.

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