Chuck Palahniuk 's Fight Club Complex "War Fight Club" is mainly a commentary on pressures and problems related to today' s society and the modern world. The hero, an unnamed narrator represents everyday person, or "average joe". The narrator is certainly not psychologically stable, but he can still convey the ideology of Palahniuk in a coherent way. One of the most annoying ideas that Palahniuk inserted into the book is that the narrator is probably a typical example of those suffering from the theory of Sigmund Freud (Oedipus complex).
More than twenty years have passed since Chuck Palahniuk announced the fight club in the world for the first time, which affected young people in many vulnerable positions and shocked their parents. But the subject - Palahniuk 's questing in that book - the castration of late capitalism followed by terror and fear - seems to be more important than at that time. Modern people are aware of themselves in a dangerous situation, masculinity itself (right) is reevaluated, and in some cases it is ridiculed as the root cause of all social diseases. Many of them are faced with anxiety understanding that they will never succeed as parents.
In the novel "The Fight Club", Chuck Parnuk discusses many problems in society, especially in discussing the role of men. Fight clubs are designed to make men more naturally beast than theirs - this is the state they should have been in order to achieve their masculinity. The social distraction is the reason why men are not masculine. Palahniuk is using the lock bottom idea to get the character of the novel to reach the information in the book. Women form masculinity as opposed to masculinity. When all the people in the book discover the bottom of rock music and are not afraid, they rekindle like Phoenix, reborn from burning ashes. As Paraniuk said, "We can resurrect only after disasters" (70)
The movie "The Fight Club" directed by David Fincher was adapted from Chuck Parnuke's 1996 American novel "The Fight Club". Palahniuk accurately depicts toxic manhood through his exploration of Jack of the protagonist. Fincher maintains the integrity of the dark and complicated psychological drama, the Paarlinac story about a man looking for masculinity through another male treatment group using violence as a treatment. The most interesting twist in this story is the relationship between Jack (a film by Edward Norton) and his opponent Taylor Duddon (Brad Pitt plays in the movie), a relationship between two independent individuals It is not. Instead, through a series of events, the audience realized that Jack was actually Taylor. For the sake of clarity, all the discourses analyzed in this part of this article are extracted from the film.
Fight club and fidelity: Study of the toxic temperament of males and their performance in movies and literature