Literary Analysis of Fight Club

1468 Words3 Pages

Fight Club is a novel written by Chuck Palahniuk. This is a story about a protagonist who struggles with insomnia. An anonymous character suffering from recurring insomnia due to the stress brought about by his job is introduced to the reader. He visits a doctor who later sends him to visit a support group for testicular cancer victims, and this helps him in alleviating his insomnia. However, his insomnia returns after he meets Marla Singer. Later on, the narrator meets Tyler Durden, and they together establish a fight club. They continue fighting until they attract crowds of people interested in the fight club. Fight club is a story that shows the struggles between the upper class and lower class people. The upper class people here undermine the working class people by considering them as cockroaches. In addition, Palahniuk explores the theme of destruction throughout the book whereby the characters destroy their lives, body, building and the history of their town.
Fight Club is a story about the never-ending struggles between classes. The Project Mayhem is formed in an attempt to overthrow the upper class who undermines the lower class. There are a number of scenes in the story, which highlights the struggle between classes. For instance, when Tyler pees in the soup of an upper class person, when he splices pornography into films and the scene when a mechanic takes the unnamed narrator to steal body fat. The characters here do all they can to fight against the upper class people and to get revenge.
The struggle between classes is highlighted when the mechanic takes the narrator to steal body fat. The narrator was at work when the mechanic picked him and other people driving them to a medical waste dump to steal fat, which w...

... middle of paper ...

...the upper class. Through the protagonist, and Tyler, Palahniuk is able to show the struggles between the upper class and the working class and how the working class strives to revenge against the maltreatment from the upper class. Tyler’s project was necessary for change in the society. Overall, Chuck Palahniuk’s book is one of the best books to illustrate the struggles between social classes and how destruction is used to bring change.

Works Cited

Palahniuk, Chuck. Fight Club. London: Vintage, 2003. Print.
Goodlad, Lauren M. E (2007). "Men in Black: Androgyny and Ethics in Fight Club and The Crow". Goth: Undead Subculture. Duke University Press. pp. 89–118.
Tuss, Alex (Winter 2004). "Masculine Identity and Success: A Critical Analysis of Patricia Highsmith's The Talented Mr. Ripley and Chuck Palahniuk's Fight Club". The Journal of Men's Studies 12 (2): 93–102.

Open Document