The Trial
by Franz Kafka
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- "In the Penal Colony": Punishment without the Crime
Kafka's short story, "In the Penal Colony," is a perfect companion piece to The Trial that your students can read either before or after the novel. In this haunting tale, a condemned prisoner is subjected to torture as punishment for a crime that he's not sure he even committed. The nature of the punishment is painful, gruesome, and dark. Your students will be horrified and fascinated. Yay? - "Help, Ma! I've Turned Into A Bug!"
If your students can't get enough of the kraziness of Kafka, direct their attention to one of his most famous works: The Metamorphosis. Not only does this story have one of the most eye-catching opening lines in all of literature ("When Gregor Samsa woke up one morning from unsettling dreams, he found himself changed into a monstrous vermin"), but it's another perfect example of Kafka's trademark use of fantasy elements as metaphors for universal themes and real human problems. (Bonus: your students will have fun debating whether The Metamorphosis or The Trial is the weirder tale. It may come down to a coin toss.)