Franz Kafka illustrates the
dissatisfying existence of a life driven by pride in his short story, “The
Hunger Artist.” Through his depiction of the starving and emaciated artist,
Kafka reveals how looking for fulfillment in the admiration of others can lead
to a frustrating and often times unsatisfactory life. Kafka employs the use of
visual imagery when describing the wasted state of the artist and the cage in
which he resides to reveal to the reader the destructive nature of pride.
Throughout
the story, Kafka adds small details about the hunger artist’s appearance. Kafka
says that the artist’s “ribs stick out so prominently” and calls his waist
“emaciated.” These images, so seemingly minute that they barely catch the
reader’s attention, all aggregate to create a picture of a man so sickly and
small that he looks on the brink of death. These horrific pictures make the
reader wonder why the artist would ever subject himself to this wasted
lifestyle. Kafka reveals that the artist does this for his pride. He does this
so that he can feel the satisfaction of onlookers who revere him for his
sacrifice. He wears his protruding ribcage and scrawny frame as a badge of
honor. The artist’s gaunt and grotesque body feeds his vanity and drives his
desire to be admired by an audience. This image of a withered and wasted man
serves to illustrate the harmful effects of pride. When one finds his identity
within the opinions of others, he sacrifices himself. The trying and exhaustive
process of seeking acceptance wears the body and soul out until nothing but
frail skin and bones remain.
Part
of the hunger artist’s act requires him to live the days of his fast in a cage.
He chooses to be confined in a transparent space that simultaneously makes him
completely visible to the audience and bars him from personal contact. Like an
animal, he is put on display for spectators to marvel and gaze upon him. The
image of the cage serves as a metaphor for the consequences of the artist’s pride.
His pride drives his art and—for a time—proves successful in motivating him to
improve his fasting. Over time, the
artist’s pride leads him to an obsession that confines him. His need to prove
to himself—and others—that he last for longer amounts of time without food
causes him to push away from society and into himself. The artist’s desire to
be admired and connected with an audience is overwhelmed by his need to push
his limits on starvation. Eventually his pride leads him to push away from
human contact and retreat into his cage, thus barring himself from society
entirely.
Despite
his best efforts, the artist never finds fulfillment. He works to push his
limits on starvation in hopes of finding satisfaction, but this just feeds his
emotional—and physical—hunger. He yearns for a sense of gratification that
deprivation never achieves. The source of the artist’s deprivation is his
pride. His need to prove to his audience that he can entertain them by starving
himself results in a hollow and lifeless existence. Through his depiction of
the hunger artist, Kafka makes clear to the reader that pride has a converse
effect. Looking for outer satisfaction leads a person to be like the hunger
artist: dissatisfied and yearning for more.
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