Hello. Unfortunately, you did not submit the excerpt that your question refers to, which makes it impossible for it to be answered. However, when searching for your question, I was able to find another question exactly like yours, which showed the excerpt from "Letter to His Father." This excerpt is in the figure attached below. If that's the case for you, I hope the answer below will help you.
Answer:
The moment when Gregor Sansa transforms into an insect in "The Metamorphosis" and cannot explain himself as he is attacked by his own father, reflects Kafka's personal feelings in the excerpt presented below.
Explanation:
The excerpt from Kafka's letter to his father shows how he felt repressed, unable to express himself and communicate in the presence of his father who attacks him vehemently. This can be seen in "The Metamorphosis" written by Kafka himself, where Gregor Sansa, the protagonist of the story, wakes up transformed into an insect. Gregor becomes something repulsive to his family, something that causes discomfort and becomes useless. This feeling causes Gregor's father to attack him with intensity, but Gregor feels repressed, ashamed and unable to explain his situation, just as Kafka felt towards his own father.
To begin, the White Man's Burden was written in 1899 by Kipling while the Black Man's Burden was written in 1920 by Morel. In the White Man's Burden, the author justifies imperialism mentioning that Europeans ruling over underdeveloped nations is their responsibility. In the other hand, the author of the Black Man's Burden believes that the justifications mentioned in White Man's Burden are nothing but a lie. He believed that the colonization of these underdeveloped nations was only for the Europeans to gain access to their natural resources and take advantage of them. The author mentions all of the different ways in which colonialism damaged the people of these nations.
Many of the accused had their reputations ruined and in some cases would be blacklisted from being able to get new jobs, as well as being harassed by anti-Communist groups and individuals.
<span>in 1929 the Mediterranean fruit fly invaded the state, and the citrus industry suffered. A quarantine was established, and troops set up roadblocks and checkpoints to search vehicles for any contraband citrus fruit. Florida's citrus production was cut by about sixty percent.</span>