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A**S
"The only sensible thing was to adapt oneself to existing conditions."
Kafka juxtaposes the absurdity of the law and authority with the paradox of the human condition. Dragged into the whirpool of meaningless jurisprudence, the more Josef tries to comprehend, the more he remains confused. The very act of comprehension, then, becomes synonymous with confusion where confusion is the orderly basis of law, the very workings of which are abstruse. The law that regulates becomes the law that dislocates. Josef, imprisoned in the apparent state of the fractional hesitance of freedom, is in pursit of the law. Unfortunately, the law is illusive. Hauntological. The only way to comprehend is to adapt and adjust to the predicament in which we remain [un]accommodated.P.S: What are we in trial for? Well, if only we knew.
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