s account of Herr. K’s experience is riddled with nonsensical paradigms Kafka always manages through what I perceive as allegory to express an insatiable understanding that through surrealism, absurdity, illogic, and alienation there is a common ground to which everybody can understand, because there is no one in this world that cannot relate to the experiences Kafka presents, be it that most situations are of a more realistic nature. By the time I finished The Trial I had undergone a total revision of my perception of Kafka’s use of the absurd. At first I was hampered by the excessive use of erroneous alliteration and was unable to decipher the motivation behind such baseless inconsistencies, but by the conclusion of the novel I was struck with Kafka’s ingenious expos of the true paradoxical correlation between sagacity and the utterly absurd. Through tact and literary manipulation the deliverance of such a transformation was truly articulated and implied in as such away as to completely envelop and situate Kafka’s audience in the trials and tribulations of Herr.K’s tragic experience, the affect being that of direct relation and therefore uniting the illogicality of the absurd with the irony that was twisted from the absurd....