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Masculine Identity in the Service Class: An Analysis of Fight Club By Adrienne Redd Last updated on June 27, 2004 Copyright 1996-2004 Adrienne Redd Table of Contents 1 Gray-Collar Workers 2 On Being a Man Who Serves Others 3 "A Very Strange Time in My Life" 4 Shattering the American Dream 5 Nervous Laughter 6 Hypotheses about Masculine Identity 1 Gray-Collar Workers
This film will be more enjoyable for those who see it first and then read this analysis because, like
The
Sixth Sense or The Crying Game, Fight Club has a secret, which
this discussion will reveal.
As does Natural Born Killers (www.geomatics.kth.se/sjoberg/homepage/nbk.htm), this film
addresses morality and society by using the motif of violence. But like that film, it is not primarily about
violence any more than Dog Day Afternoon is about bank robbery. Nonetheless,
Fight Club (www.foxmovies.com/fightclub/)
will inspire
wringing of hands as critics and commentators call it a mirror held up to an empty and tormented
contemporary consciousness. This is a misinterpretation and not the central point of the film.
Prima facie, Fight Club is also about masculinity, but with the crucial proviso that it is about masculinity
among a specific class of American men: the burgeoning stratum of service or gray-collar workers.
There was a time when blue-collar workers could invest in a kind of honor and mythology of hard physical
work, but "the world has changed" (as one Bruce Springsteen song laments (www.musica.org/letras/ing1/Y19049.htm)) and now former steelworkers are parking cars, waiting
tables, and watching security monitors. They have not even the solace of big muscles and the solidarity of
unions from which to construct their identities and with which to salve their bruised egos. And as a
character says in the film, they lack a great cause, like a war or depression, in which to test themselves.
2 On Being a Man Who Serves Others
With nihilistic aphorisms and near-poetry, the story is told by the narrator (Edward Norton,
www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/movies/oscars/edward_norton.htm), whose name we never
learn, although he has aliases. Call him Jack. After suffering from insomnia for sixth months and
developing a dependence on a comically wide array of support groups (testicular cancer, brain parasites,
tuberculosis, and
various 12-step groups), Jack first encounters another faker at the support groups, a
derelict young predator named Marla Singer (Helena Bonham Carter, www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/filmgrph/helena_bonham_carter.htm) and soon
after an alter ego who blows up his condo unit (unbeknownst to him). Condoless, he moves into a
dilapidated house in the warehouse district with his new friend, Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt,
washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/filmgrph/brad_pitt.htm). Thus he begins a series of
adventures: fistfighting with a growing circle of other men for fun, giving assignments of starting fights
with strangers, becoming increasingly more defiant at work, making premium soap from the fat discarded
by liposuction clinics, and ultimately building an army of gray-collar workers to wreak havoc around the
unnamed city (perhaps Los Angeles) -- first in a transgressional way and then more and more
destructively.
In a twist that will catch most viewers by surprise, Tyler Durden turns out to be a fragment of Jack's
personality, but this is merely a device to have this mysterious and powerful character (and manifestation
of wish fulfillment)
appear in Jack's life. (An analysis of Tyler Durden's name reveals that in antiquated
English, "Tyler" means gatekeeper or house builder. "Durden" has the word root dour meaning
hard (as
in "durable"). His initials, T.D., invoke Todd or death in German or perhaps D.T. (delirium tremens),
since Tyler is a hallucination of Jack, the waking person. Although a second viewing shows that the first
understanding of the film meshes successfully with subsequent viewings, the narrative device of the
alternate personality is just that and does little to tap into what is understood about multiple personalities.
One of few consistencies with psychological literature is that Jack, the waking self, is depleted and
becomes less powerful as Tyler becomes more dominant. An aside, it's interesting to note that this is the
second film in Norton's short but meteoric career in which he has played a character with multiple
personalities, the first being Primal Fear (1996) (www.aboutfilm.com/movies/p/primalfear.htm), in
which Norton made his film debut.
Fight Club is really about what it is to be a man who serves others (as women have traditionally) and how
such men construct identity and meaning in their lives. That women now can take most of the jobs that
men can is certainly a background fact, but the film explores other issues or sources of masculinity. The
first of three
pivotal scenes in this film is a moment of intimacy between Jack and Tyler when they confide
that their fathers are distant and disengaged. Jack's father left when he was a small boy and married
subsequent wives and had subsequent families. Tyler says that his father didn't go to college and so this
was very important for Tyler to do (and Jack comments that this sounds familiar.) He says that his father
was not able to adequately answer his series of questions of "now what?" Later, when Tyler subjects Jack
to a deep chemical burn on his hand (which leaves a scar curiously like puckered lips), Tyler makes this
empty silhouette where the father-deity should be more explicit, asking Jack, "What if God doesn't want
you? What if you are one of his unwanted children?" This is echoed when the Tyler personality "leaves"
(and Jack must pursue him) and Jack laments, "My father dumped me. Tyler dumped me."
3 "A Very Strange Time in My Life"
Another potential font of masculine meaning, a man's identity in contrast to (and potentially in harmony
with) women as partners is touched upon briefly and discounted. Tyler says in his heart-to-heart with
Jack: "We are a generation of men raised by women. Do you really think that women are the answer?" At
the prospect of marriage, in hypothetical response to Tyler's questions of
"what next?" Jack says, "How
can I get married? I'm a 30-year-old boy." Not until Tyler becomes a threat to Marla, who has been
Tyler's lover, does Jack take steps to protect her. In the final moment of the film, he can acknowledge that
he has been part of this relationship (which he believed only to be between Tyler and Marla) and can be
tender to her. By way of explanation, he says, "You met me at a very strange time in my
life."
The film, though violent and brutally blunt, is remarkably nonsexual. The love in the film is not love
between
Tyler (or Jack) and Marla, nor is it homoerotic (the idea that heterosexual men need to integrate
their feminine side or embrace some of the sensitivity of gay men is completely
avoided). There is not a
single gay character. There only is the goal of self-love, both in the sense of a well-integrated self and in
the sense of the central male character, Jack-Tyler, loving his penis. One of the marginal professions that
Tyler pursues (while Jack seems to experience insomnia, but is in a kind of fugue state) is that of
projectionist. He enjoys splicing single frames of pornography ("a nice big (flaccid for the ratings people
we suppose) cock") into family films. In fact, just before the credits roll at the end of
Fight Club, one can
observe one such nearly subliminal image. There are also nagging fears of castration and mutilation that
pervade the film. The first support meeting that Jack attends is a testicular cancer group where the
members have had their testicles removed and commiserate, saying, "We're still men." One of the
survivors of testicular cancer, Bob (Meatloaf), has grown huge breasts because of subsequent hormone
imbalances, but there is no sense of his being effeminate. His breasts are almost incidental
and (consistent
with the rest of the film's dismissal of women) referred to as "bitch tits." After the Tyler personality
blows up Jack's condo, he tells him that it could be worse: He could have had a woman cut off his penis as
he slept and thrown out the window of a moving car. Castration is also a threat used against adversaries
at other points of the film. Jack embraces and reintegrates Tyler in the final scene of the film when he
shoots himself in the face, "killing" Tyler. The act (which exorcises Tyler as a distinct fragment of Jack)
takes courage and abandon worthy of Tyler. Afterward, Jack seems powerful and in control.
4 Shattering the American Dream
The other two pivotal scenes, with regard to exploring masculinity, are occasions
when Tyler speaks to
the members of fight club, saying, "We've all been raised to believe that we'll be millionaires and movie
idols. But we won't!" This ties into the American dream and the mythology that anyone can become rich
or become president.
Part of the way that the working poor are lulled into cooperating and staying in the
service of richer classes is by this unspoken promise that if they work hard they will ascend to higher
security and status. Implying that the fights fill the men's need to test themselves, Tyler also says that this
generation of men has had no Great Depression or great wars in which they could prove their toughness
and worth. Ridiculing men who sculpt their bodies in fitness clubs, Tyler says, "Self-improvement is
masturbation." Of the fights, Jack says, "nothing was solved" but "we all felt saved." (Interestingly,
most of the fistfighters are the same "angry white men" who voted against liberals in the 1996 elections.)
In spite of the implied criticism of social stratification, the narrator behind the narrator or the core
sensibility of the film does particularly lionize gray-collar men. One of Tyler's practices becomes what he
calls "human sacrifice." He pretends to rob a convenience store, tells the clerk he is going to murder him
and then tells him that if he does not pursue the dream he originally held (becoming a veterinarian or
whatever), that he will be dead in six weeks. This implies that the motivation to succeed must come from
the individual who has slipped into the gray-collar class, not from the system and that the individual, not
the system, is responsible for the individual's success.
Before he blackmails his boss to put him on salary for not revealing the company's unscrupulous business
practices and quits his job as a recall coordinator (analyzing catastrophic crashes to determine if the auto
company should issue a recall), Jack emails haikus such as the following to his
coworkers:
The worker bees can leave The drones can fly away The queen is their slave.
This implies that the people at the top of society are slaves to the service class, of which Jack-Tyler's
followers
are members. (Interestingly, the novel, Alias Grace (1996) (www.dancingbadger.com/agrace.htm), by Canadian author Margaret Atwood, also touches on
the idea that the privileged are helpless and almost childlike without those who serve them.) There is a
certain disdain for the classes higher than themselves and at the same time, the implication of an
unwilling parasitism. This is epitomized in the premium soap that Tyler makes from human fat and sells
at a chic shop. He delights in "selling rich women their fat asses back to them."
There is also a sense in which Tyler, though he works at a restaurant and as a projectionist, is not truly
one of the class of gray-collar workers. Late in the film, when Jack is just about to learn the secret of his
additional personality, he interrogates a worker in a dry cleaning facility and then snorts in disgust,
"you're a moron." This individual devaluation is also manifested in one of Tyler Durden's mantras for the
corps: "You are not special. You are the all-singing, all-dancing crap of the world." There also is a very
powerful implication that although Tyler tries to give his followers awareness and a sense of living every
moment fully, they have merely exchanged one set of programming for another. This is most painfully
evident when Bob, now a member of Project Mayhem, is shot and killed. One soldier insists on burying
the evidence (the body). The soldiers assert that as members of Project Mayhem they have no names and
Jack insists, "This is a friend of mine and his name is Robert Paulson." They take this as a new part of
their credo and begin to chant, "His name was Robert Paulson. His name was Robert Paulson."
Also supporting the idea that the gray-collar workers are merely waiting to be programmed is another
scene near the end of the film. Tyler Durden is driving recklessly to try to shock Jack (who has not yet
become aware that they are two aspects of one person) into feeling alive. He turns to two of the soldiers
and says, if you knew you were going to die, what would you do?" They intone emotionlessly, as though it
is a rote response, "paint a self-portrait" and "build a house."
5 Nervous Laughter
The film is ultimately deeply conflicted about the identity and worth of gray-collar workers. After Project
Mayhem's destruction has drawn the awareness of city leaders, some of its members wait tables at an anti-
crime banquet. They grab the police commissioner in the men's room and threaten him with castration if
he does not call off the investigation, saying, "We cook your food; we haul your trash; we place your calls;
we guard you while you are sleeping. Do not fuck with us."
Using soap to make explosives to destroy the records of all the credit card companies seems like a Marxist
impulse to level society (but it is quixotic and pointless since all such records are double-
or triple-backed
up.)
On the other hand, exonerating the least responsible citizens from their consumer debt contradicts
Tyler's urging clerks to work harder to become what they dreamed of being. Tyler's goal is not, however,
a Marxist leveling of the industrial world nor even a revolution by agricultural peasants. In a vision of the
post-destruction world that Tyler articulates to Jack before he "leaves," he seems to describe a pre-agrarian, hunter-gatherer world where young, strong men are kings once again. (This sensibility is well
captured in Mose Allison's "Young Man Blues,"
recorded by The Who in 1968.) Tyler's first conversation with Jack, in which he asks him if he knows
what a duvet is and ridicules the valuelessness of this knowledge in the "hunter-gatherer
sense," reinforces
Tyler's pre-agrarian, pre-specialization, pre-societal stratification vision.
Although dark, this is a very funny film, inspiring much laughter, both nervous and hearty. The
transgressional
mischief that Jack and his Tyler component engage in is also an important part of being
male. Reversing the tines on parking lots so that tires explode dramatically as unsuspecting drivers exit,
slipping revised safety guidelines into the rear seat pockets of airplanes which show the passengers
praying, weeping, and cringing in fear, bucking the system exploring new realms are all parts of the
defiant and creative curiosity that leads men to fly to the moon and climb mountains just because they
are there.
6 Hypotheses about Masculine Identity
There are two hypotheses about another potential source of masculine identity. It may be that only men of
middle class and above get to be gentle, reliable providers and perhaps working class men only get to be
violent (and have that outlet be socially accepted.)
The second hypothesis is that the materialism that is so reviled and rejected throughout the film is the real
social flaw, not the stratification of society. Perhaps working class men only feel like they cannot be
gentle,
responsible providers because they have been seduced into what Jack calls "the Ikea nesting
instinct," the urge to keep up with the Joneses and to be defined by one's things. Echoing Thoreau, Tyler
says early in the film that "the things you own end up owning you," and one of his instructional speeches after
he assembled the Project Mayhem army is, "You are not your job. You are not the contents of your wallet.
You are not the car you drive. You are not your khakis." It may be that working class people's finances
and their standards for happiness are destroyed believing the marketing that says that everyone can and
should have every convenience and material pleasure. This cannot be true, because if such luxuries could
be had by everyone, they would not be so desirable.
Another compelling theme of this film seems to be accepting the reality of one's mortality and living life
to the fullest. While waiting for a plane, Jack says, "This is your life and it's ending one moment at a
time." The terminally ill members of the support groups are also a strong reminder of death the project of
being alive until one dies. The first time that Jack converses with Marla, who
is, like him, a support group tourist, she finishes his sentence for him. He says, " When people think you're dying they really listen," and she
adds "... instead of waiting for their turn to speak."
The film is also about escaping conventional society. Representative of escaping out the top of a cold and
constrictive society are the references to being a millionaire or a celebrity. Representative of escaping out
the bottom are the constant references to "trying to hit bottom" to attain a freedom that doesn't come until
one has nothing to lose. However, though Tyler and the other characters want to walk away from
conventional consumer
society, they do retain a sense of honor. Tyler makes Jack promise three times not
to speak about him (and this makes the dual realities of Tyler as a separate physical person and Tyler as
fragment possible) and when Tyler stands up to Lou, the owner of a building in whose basement the fight
club meets, they resolve the conflict with Tyler taking only the owner's word that they can continue to use
the building. This and the threat with which Tyler extracts a promise from the police commissioner recall
the concept of testifying. It means to "tell the truth" in a formal sense, but has its origins in the Roman
punishment of castration for perjury. To promise or to give one's word was to promise upon one's testicles.
Fight Club's themes of honor and freedom (perhaps attainable through total disengagement from society
and perhaps by starting over) remains complex and contradictory, as do its exploration of individual work
and group power. Ultimately this film, directed by David Fincher (Seven, 1995;
The Game, 1997) does
not coalesce perfectly, but its themes and images are rich with meaning and it is one of the deepest
explorations of modern masculinity within the working class to date.
Adrienne Redd has
written about film, theater, music, the visual arts, politics, and the
environment for 20 years. She lectures on film and leads a monthly film
discussion for the County
Theater in Doylestown, Pennsylvania. She is writing
a book about American political activists, working on a documentary and
pursuing graduate work in sociology at Temple University in Philadelphia.
This essay copyright (c) 2000-2004 by Adrienne Redd.
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