Generation X Males example essay topic
You are not a beautiful and unique snowflake". This ideology represents a counter-culture to the typical American pop culture and creed. As demonstrated throughout the movie, this 'revolution' is a fight against the widely accepted and conventional wisdom that inhabits the media and has an unparalleled affect on the outcome of our society. Fight Club is a reflection of the suffering experienced by the 'Generation X' male who feels trapped in the world of the grey-collar working-class. The world that he inhabits is filled with materialism and distractions. Additionally, these males are part of a smaller group of men raised in single-parent families often devoid of a male role-model, living in a time period where there is no great cause for the average North American male to fight for.
No purpose. This all constructs a loss of identity and reason in the male that is eventually resolved through enlightenment brought on by Fight Club; Self-destruction vs. self-improvement. In the movie, the main character is introduced to the audience without a name and the ambiguity of the situation only becomes more entrenched in their minds as the movie progresses. The narrator comes to us without a name because he represents 'any man'; anyone of those 'Generation X' males living is our society at the present. The narrator is a thirty-three year old man employed as a recall coordinator for a major automobile company.
He lives in a condo that is furnished with all the comforts of modern society, namely mass-produced furniture brought on by the 'IKEA' craze. He owns a car and has obtained a 'respectable' wardrobe for himself (or so he thinks) over the course of time. Despite all of these things, however, he is not satisfied with his life. He feels unhappy, unfulfilled, and is trapped in the depths of chronic insomnia. In an attempt to resolve his insomnia, the narrator becomes addicted to support groups for the eternally ill, or people living at 'death's door'. As the narrator explains, "If people thought you were dying, they gave you their full attention.
If this might be the last time they saw you, they really saw you... People listened instead of just waiting for their turn to speak". Through this as well as other events, we are able to see that the narrator is frustrated with others in his life, feeling as if they are too caught up with their own preoccupations to truly care about how he is feeling or what he really needs or wants. In one scene during a support group meeting, the narrator discovers through the use of guided meditation that his power animal is a penguin. This is very symbolic because upon further examination, one realizes that although the penguin is a bird, it cannot fly. Additionally the penguin travels in large packs, almost never deviating from the 'normal' function of the penguin.
The narrator is part of the human species, yet he does not know what to do besides 'following the pack'. He is trapped by the walls created by society and reinforced by his subconscious. The ending result of all of this confusion and anxiety is the creation of Tyler Durden; everything that the narrator is desirous of being. The creation of this character and the ideals set forth by him represent all the frustrations and, at the same time, all of the desires of the 'Generation X', lost male.
One of the most important themes embodied in Tyler Durden is the desire to escape from the materialistic world that has grasped and failed a somewhat large portion of society. A Tyler explains, .".. the things you own, end up owning you". This theme is omnipotent throughout the story and allows the audience to take a look at society from a very different perspective..