Disassociation, Personality Disorders, & Global Capitalism:
Open Your Eyes to the Fight Club
Fight Club is a cinematic adaptation of a novel of the same title; therefore, the novel will be referenced peripherally in this work. While the focus of the paper will be upon Fight Club, in an effort to expand the context of the ideas to be discussed, the essay will also include analysis of a related Spanish film, Abre Los Ojos (Open Your Eyes). This film preceded the release of Fight Club by two years and went on to later be adapted for an American audience under the title, Vanilla Sky, starring Tom Cruise, Cameron Diaz, and Penelope Cruz, who is cast as the same character, Sofia, in both versions of the film. The paper will discuss these films, questions they raise, and ideas they execute in relation to Doniger's piece, "Many Masks, Many Selves." The paper will demonstrate through analysis and synthesis that a possible result of global capitalism is mental break down and/or rebellion. These films feature protagonists who reflect how global capitalism contributes to a disassociative state as well as brings on a range of personality disorders.
Both films are either the sources or results of adaptations. Both films' protagonists are narcissistic men with personality disorders and sleep disorders. The protagonists of both films, due to traumas inflicted up on them and because of those they inflict upon others, suffer from delusions and are victim of psychological distortions of reality. In Fight Club, the unnamed narrator and protagonist, wears the mask of Tyler Durden, his bold, philosophical, nihilistic, rockstar imagined version of himself. In Abre Los Ojos, Cesar, literally wears a prosthetic mask to hide his once gorgeous face that now disfigured beyond repair. What Cesar does not realize is that his handsome face, the face of a consumptive, affluent playboy was a mask that hid his true self from himself.
The topic the research is to address or examine is the social psychological affects of high capitalism and consumer culture upon the individual and the group. A greater issue of the film is pluralistic identity in the information age as well as inter- and intrapersonal disconnect in a global consumer culture. Doniger contextualizes this issue as she writes:
"What do these stories both historical and mythological tell us? We assume that masquerades lie, and they often do, at least on the surface. But masquerading as ourselves often reaffirms an enduring network of selves inside us, which does not change even if our masquerades, intentional or helpless, make us look different to others." (Doniger, "Many Masks, Many Selves," Page 67)
Her argument then is that each individual is not one self, but a network of selves switching on, off, and among each other to suit the needs of the wearer of the masks, as will be illustrated in Fight Club and Abre Los Ojos. Another topic the film(s) is the connection between the affects of societal, institutional, and ideological structures affect upon the individual and the group. Bennett contends that mental illness and disassociation are at the forefront of Fight Club and are linked to consumerism just as much as the film is about violence and anarchy. Consumer culture is far more widespread with the advent of the Internet and the deeper reach of globalization; therefore, the existential situations the characters find themselves in will not only occur in America, but also occur in countries around the world, such as Spain, the setting for Abre Los Ojos.
Fight Club was first a novel, published in 1996; later in 1999, a screen adaptation of the book was released. The book and the film come right at the turn of the 21st century, right on the cusp of a turning point in culture, technology, and perspective. The narrative of Fight Club/Fight Club is told by the title character who formally has no name. He is a middle class, white-collar, white American man bored and hypnotized by his existence. As part of the travel for his profession, he encounters a soap entrepreneur and part time anarchist, Tyler Durden, on a commercial, domestic flight. After the narrator's apartment explodes, he turns to Tyler for consolation. The two become friends and partners in crime in a very literal sense of the phrase. Among the plethora of acts against established authority they perpetrate, their piece de resistance is the establishment of "Fight Club."
Fight Club begins as an underground boxing/fighting club for men to bond with other men and release the tension of modern living in a relatively safe environment....
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