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One flight in particular leads to the development of an entirely new ideology and state of
mind in the narrator. By meeting or coming to terms with his Freudian ID like state of mind
(in the form of Tyler Durden), he begins to digress from this thoroughly engrained meta-narrative
hes wasted most of his life believing he identified with. Through Tyler, he sees an unkempt
almost Buddhist side of himself, one that believes materialism is the root of all evil and chooses
to live in complete squatter so as long as he has a roof over his head. He doesnt believe in
conventional movies with happy endings and a sheer lack of realism. This is seen through his
time working at a movie theater cutting snippets of nude images into films. The way Tyler
Durden portrays himself on a regular basis consistently picks at this commonly accepted
ideology of what society should be. Hes willing to grow an army in order to invoke complete
and utter anarchy with the end goal being to deconstruct this notion that capitalism is how
society should conduct its self.
It isnt until Tyler Durden influences the narrator to blow up his own apartment does
his ideology begin to radically shift. By ridding himself of these materialistic possessions he
attained in an attempt to feel a sense of fulfillment, he felt liberated for the first time. It quickly
became apparent that his constant battle to climb the corporate ladder, acquire wealth, and to find
a sense of fulfillment through materialism was a relentless and meaningless state of existence
that he completely unknowingly embedded himself into. As smoke billows from the narrator's
once humble abode, he realizes his life is metaphorically as empty as the fridge that once stood
in his now burning apartment.
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Particularly, what stands out to me as a key moment where Tyler Durden firmly expresses why
this commonly believed and practiced meta-narrative needs to be deconstructed is shown in this
quote:
Were the middle children of history, man no purpose or place. We have no great war,
no great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war. Our great depression is our lives.
We've all been raised on television to believe that one day we'd all be millionaires and
movie gods and rock stars but we won't. We're slowly learning that fact. And we're
very, very pissed off.
The quote suggests that our generation lacks an innate purpose that is worth fighting for. Instead
of a great war of nations, weve almost declared a war on our sanity by buying into this
materialist ideology where money and success are portrayed to be of utmost importance while
spirituality and true purpose in knowing oneself has been entirely lost in the pursuit of greed.
This idea leads into the reasoning behind making a Fight Club in the first place. Culturally the
common ideology is that if we just continue to follow the rat race, go to work, etc well live a
long happy life into retirement. This meta-narrative is a false perception of what reality really is
because in reality, we could die at any time, and death will undoubtedly come to each and every
one of us. It's intention is to make us realize our own mortality and understand the sheer fragility
of life. By denying this urge to practice self-preservation and avoid all situations that may result
in untimely death, Tyler Durden believes that the best way to combat this issue is to fight
senselessly to gain a sense of being fully alive. This is demonstrated obviously though the
organized fights in bar basements, but also in a number of scenes scattered throughout the novel
and movie.
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Particularly, the scene where Tyler holds a gun to the innocent store clerks head in order
to invoke a sense of reality into him stands out as a rejection of the mundane monotonous flow of
life. By going through this near death experience, Raymond K Hessel will truly live every single
day to its fullest, enjoy his food more, and may even finish medical school. This suggests that
many of us fall into monotonous routine and cease to realize that our life is passing by second by
second, minute by minute, and more often than not we take the painless route and forget that
we dont live forever. This rejects the idea that well all live until were 90 and become
extremely wealthy because, in reality, we could get senselessly shot execution style in a back
alley for doing nothing more than being in the wrong place at the wrong time. By instilling a
sense of urgency to live in Raymond, Fight Club further rejects this meta-narrative of how one
should conduct his life.
This on the edge, live for the moment philosophy consumes the narrator and he applies it
to areas outside of just Fight Club. Instead of continuously being belittled and undermined by his
boss like society tells him he should do, the narrator decides to stand up for himself and instill a
sense of reality in his boss by making him realize the potential consequences of his actions. He
does this by stating that instead of worrying about trivial Fight Club flyers in the copying
machine, maybe he should worry more about a man wielding an assault rifle that's fed up with
the daily grind that decides to slaughter the entire office without warning. Although this seems
unrealistic to his boss and leaves him speechless; it rejects the common flow in which things
typically go in life. We dont anticipate our sudden death because of something out of control,
but in reality, it can happen any day, any time.
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Near the end of the novel that seemingly had no true direction or purpose begins to
unravel and show its true meaning. The narrator realizes that in order to completely reject this
common ideology society has forced people to play into, he needs to construct a vigilante militia
of like-minded individuals that together could dismantle society to the point of complete
collapse. He sees anarchy as the only solution to breaking society by large out of this rat race
weve all lost ourselves in. By attacking sources of materialism: credit card companies, coffee
shops, clothing and jewelry stores the narrator intends to eliminate this need for it so people
will focus on what's truly important in life. By rejecting this meta-narrative that society should
be most concerned with (wealth, career progression, and material goods), you begin to
understand the post-modernist meta-narrative here is to reject conventions, question society, and
ultimately to deny what's commonly perceived as the correct way to live while being fully aware
of our mortality.
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Chris Kostantewicz
491: Topics in Criticism