The book starts with the narrator and co-protagonist, Ponyboy Curtis, the youngest member of the Greasers (Lower class) going back home after an outdoor movie night. He is encountered by one of the Socs (Higher class), and attacked until his gang arrives to help. The Greasers and Socs need no other party’s provocation to fight. The next day, the Greasers visit the movie theatre once again and find Soc’s girlfriends hanging out. After a failed attempt by the older members of the Greasers to flirt with them, Ponyboy unprecedentedly succeeds in a long-talk and escorts them to the girls’ home, only to encounter the Soc’s, who are extremely mad. Fortunately, the girls stop the fight and Ponyboy runs back home, where Dally is waiting anxiously for him. Dally is extremely mad by the fact that such a young boy like…
Together they discuss and recall their adventures and crazy childhood. It starts off with Rusty playing pool at Benny's when he hears that Biff Wilcox, a tuff gangster wants to kill him because he swore at Biff's girlfriend. Rusty acts real cool about it and pretends not to care. He goes to Patty's house, his girlfriend, and she pleads him not to fight anymore and he's just like this is the last one, but she doesn't believe him anyway. After that he goes to the parking lot where the fight is taking place. He sees his friends there and he also sees Biff's friends there. He counts the people and makes sure no one brought any weapons just like his brother, the motorcycle boy taught him to do just before a fight. They start cussing each other out and then the fight starts, while everyone else watches. Biff pulls out a blade and this makes the fight unfair. But still Rusty manages to take him down and knocks the crap out of him. While Biff is on the floor Motorcycle Boy walks in the middle of the fight and gets pissed of at his little brother. While Rusty is distracted Biff gets up and cuts Rusty on his side above his hips. Motorcycle boy gets angry by seeing this so he breaks Biff's wrist and leaves him lying there. All of Biff's friends abandon him when Motorcycle Boy arrives, as he is sort of the legend of the town because he used to be the leader of the former gang of the neighbourhood called…
Both The perks of being a wallflower and The Outsiders establish a controlling idea about conformity. An influence involving a change in belief or behavior in order to fit in with a group. The author Stephen Chbosky in The perks of being a wallflower discusses conformity when he writes “ We got to the house where the part was, and Patrick did his secret knock.” Here the author wants the reader to know that Charlie begins to feels peer pressure placed on him, because to follow his friends would make him more integrated. The author S.E Hinton in The Outsiders discusses conformity when she writes “ We beat the Socs.” This quote reveals that as a greasers they were conformist with winning the rumble and still have separated territories which…
He is a nineteen year old young man, that is finding his way into life and society, he tries to be different from the dull and boring, he is also really interested in getting a girl and moving from where he ir. The way he is affects how he acts during the story.…
When daylight comes, he and the boys regroup only to encounter two young broads who want to do drugs and party. Although it was really what they had been searching for all along, the boys deny their request and decide to go home instead. In one night, his fast paced life as a thug was over. Left to deal with the consequences of what he had done already, the protagonist of this story will surely never go down a path like that ever…
WARNING SPOILER ALERT. The Narrator in “Fight Club” by Chuck Palahniuk lives a single serving life filled with insomnia causing him to have multiple issues with his identity. He is a man having a mid-life crises as life became reparative and the need to search for excitement, danger, and something different becomes apparent. Whether it is feeling other people’s pain in a support groups as a way to find his released from the boring life or creating Tyler as the perfect vision of himself, his personality dramatically evolves. Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) can be linked to the changes happening as it forms the “two faces” the narrator wears in the story. Insomnia is what drove the Narrator towards the support groups to find what he needed…
Brash, self-confident and dressed like a pimp, Tyler describes himself as a soap salesman but he gives every indication of leading a darker existence. Tyler Durden’s clothing is usually red throughout the movie, which symbolizes fire, blood, rage, passion, etc. The Narrator finds himself drawn to Tyler Durden and in the end of their short trip together they exchange their business cards and are on their separate ways. When the Narrator arrives back at his apartment building, he finds his apartment on fire. His precious Ikea furniture and all his belongings have been destroyed in a mysterious explosion. With no one to call, he turns to Tyler and the two immediately bond. During some pitchers of beer at a bar Tyler identifies the cause for the Narrator's desperation. Tyler explains the Narrator is a victim of a feminized consumer culture. Tyler's therapy is simple, he helps the Narrator correct the imbalance in his own life by making him feel like a real man by fighting, actually beating each other up. On their first fight in a parking lot between the narrator and Tyler starts a ritual between the two, in which they discover there are many other men like them. Tyler Durden and the Narrator begin an underground fight club where regular, ordinary men meet to ruthlessly fight one another, releasing aggression and resisting traditional social norms with their…
He talks about how we spend so much of our time just to get ready in the morning. He says that the human body is ugly and your only hope is to avert these characteristics through using various products to make yourself look better. Spending a lot of time getting ready has become normal to society now and it seems like how you look means more to people now then it has ever before.…
Relationships are often a cyclone of emotions and thoughts that disastrously destroy lives or haphazardly shape paths that lead to new things. In Playing by Heart, the characters experience all these in a short time. While it was a fictional depiction of real situations, much can be gleaned from this film. Being that this movie corresponds with terms in our book the connections are endless.…
This essay will explore how gender can be represented in Fight Club, it will go into depth on the comparison between femininity and masculinity and the constraints that come with it. It will also consider the specific traits that are established with each gender and how our characters mask them.…
Fight Club is a movie about Jack who is an insomniac man, he work as a car manufacturer. He owns everything he wanted to from his condo to the furniture’s he have. Due to his insomniac he keeps on going to various groups also with the people with serious illness in order to get the human contact he wants. He has no friends at all, no relationship and no love ones. He thinks that joining clubs and other groups is the only thing to help him sleep. Until he meet a girl named Marla who he tends to have sex desire. The life of Jack change when he meets Tyler the soap maker who is played by Brad Pitt. After Tyler’s apartment blown into pieces mysteriously Jack lives with Tyler in an abandoned place. They tend try to fight that made them create a secret organization known as fight Club. At the ending of the story we see the twist of the story wherein Tyler is actually manifestation of “Jack” subconscious and repressed desires. This movie gives as the glimpse of identifying the Marx, Darwin, Freud and Nietzsche themes.…
The movie Fight Club is a story of one man's struggle to gain control over his life. His masculinity has become so repressed by his upbringing and society that the only way he can do this is to create an alternate personality. The Narrator's alternate personality is Tyler Durden, the ultimate alpha-male. The Narrator is also interested in Marla Singer, who is going through the same type of struggle that he is except she has more confidence then he does and is a stronger character. The film is of the Narrator's attempt to find that masculine side he has lost and reclaim it into him.…
We all like to think of ourselves as individuals. However, in truth, we all live in a mass denial created be ourselves to feel less guilty about instituting severe pressure to, and the consequences if one does not, conform. The way one learns about oneself is often through others' words and actions. This outside feedback creates a role for a person that he/she accepts as "who he/she is." Therefore, it is the words and actions of another that forms the self-identity of a person, and ad this relationship develops, positive, reinforcing words and actions become necessary for ones healthy existence. Of course, there are varying degrees of conformity, and in most people there is the struggle to hold on to their individuality. This struggle is apparent in the scene in Full Metal Jacket when Gomer Pyle is beaten with soaps in towels. The other members of the troop become upset at Pyle's nonconformity, and their negative feelings eventually reached the point of violence. Then Pyle's struggle was ended and he became like the others, a killing machine. In his article, Eisenhart recognizes that "the training process created intense emotional conflicts generated by the formation of a male role," and that there was a "continual structured effort to degrade and shape the individuals self-image." (32)…
“I find that the very things that I get criticized for, which is usually being different and just doing my own thing and just being original, is the very thing that’s making me successful.” Country singer Shania Twain explains that the things she does in her daily life, making her different from everyone else, actually makes her unique, despite the fact that it goes against social norms. A non-conformist person is someone who goes against societal norms because they are an individual who will do what they prefer to do, regardless of what others may think. In the novel The Outsider, Meursault is indifferent and passive to a conventional life that is not worth living. He refuses to be anything but himself, regardless of the price he must pay. In contrast, Keating in Dead Poet’s Society, responds to such a society by actively and passionately trying to make a difference by nurturing each person to be free to reach his or her potential and essence. Unfortunately, the society surrounding that person is responsible for crushing that individual’s essence. Those who refuse to conform to such a society are judged negatively and consequently, feel alienated. Both Keating and Meursault are strangers in a society that wants to dictate their expected behaviour and actions. Society seeks to imprison their individual freedom. In both the novel The Outsider and the movie Dead Poet’s Society, Meursault and Mr. Keating go against what society thinks and by doing so both characters are punished.…
One of the many central themes in Chuck Palahniuk’s novel Fight Club is the idea that one has to break themselves down in order to build themselves up. Joe, who serves as both the narrator and the protagonist in both the novel and film, finds himself unhappy in his consumerist life where the lines of gender roles are constantly being challenged and blurred. Joe is tortured by his work on a daily basis where he sees human lives being disregarded and turned into mere statistics with a dollar value attributed to them on a sheet of paper. This torture along with the strain of not being able to make any real human connections and relationships along with his confusion over his gender role in society lead to the creation of his alter ego, Tyler.…