The parable is referenced and reworked in the penultimate chapter of
J. M. Coetzee's novel
Elizabeth Costello (2003).
Jacques Derrida's essay of the same title examines the
meta-fictional aspects of the structure and content of Kafka's fable, such as the placing of the title before the body of the text and also within the first line of the text itself. Derrida incorporates
Immanuel Kant's notion of the
categorical imperative as well as
Freudian psychoanalysis in his reading of Kafka's fable. The 1984 fantasy film
The NeverEnding Story utilizes a similar literary device as the story, of gates with successively more fearsome guards. The 1990
Robert Anton Wilson book
Quantum Psychology contains a parable about
Before the Law. The 1985
Martin Scorsese film
After Hours features a scene which parodies this parable. The post-rock band
Long Distance Calling uses the spoken animated introduction sequence from
the Orson Welles film adaptation of The Trial in the track "Fire in the Mountain" from their 2007 album
Satellite Bay. American composer
Arnold Rosner created "Parable of the Law", a work for baritone singer and orchestra, based on Kafka's parable.
Giorgio Agamben references the parable in his book,
Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life.
Mandy Patinkin's character references the parable in an episode of
The Good Fight. ==References==