![]() ![]() ![]() could possibly have done to deserve such an extreme punishment, particularly since K.'s only failing in the novel seems to be either arrogance or sexual promiscuity. The ending also brings up the question as to what K. K.'s death is even creepier given the extreme politeness of his executioners. Just as the court is a closed system that operates in secret and according to its own mysterious rules, K.'s execution seems to come out of nowhere, without any justification. ![]() In addition to being right up there as the worst birthday ever, K.'s execution keeps to the novel's general theme of the abuse of power. K.'s execution seems all the more sudden because we never get an actual trial in the novel as far as we know, K.'s initial petition hasn't even been submitted yet, and we certainly haven't heard a judge deliver a sentence. is summarily executed on his birthday outside of town, in a quarry, by two men who seem to be dressed for a night at the opera, top hat and all. Kafka's Trial ends suddenly with a very brief chapter entitled "The End." After all of the bureaucratic delays, amorous digressions, and lectures on law and art, Josef K. ![]()
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