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    detention. The Breakfast Club gives viewers a first hand look at Gordon Allport’s Contact Hypothesis and it’s effect on high school students. The Contact Hypothesis is one of the best ways to improve conflict among inter and outer groups experiencing conflict and is exemplified throughout The Breakfast Club as the five students are forced to sit through a Saturday detention. The Contact Hypothesis is an important theory to understand before analyzing The Breakfast Club. The Contact Hypothesis

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    The Breakfast Club Chanetta McFerguson Childhood April 28‚ 2013 Melissa Harper The Breakfast Club Cliques are groups of people with mutual interests and goals‚ who spend a majority of their time with each other. They can be found at every high school. The Breakfast Club is a movie that brings five students belonging to different cliques together in an unfortunate situation-detention. At the beginning of the movie‚ these five students appear to be very different people who have nothing

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    Fight Club vs. Zoo

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    Comparative Essay: Fight Club vs. Zoo Chuck Palahniuk’s Fight Club and James Patterson’s Zoo are both two very different novels that revolve around supressed anger and the release of that emotion. Fight Club is about an insomniac office worker and a devil-may-care soap maker who form an underground fight club that transforms into a violent revolution. Zoo revolves around a young‚ twenty-three year old biologist‚ who drops out of college to bring forward his Human-Animal Conflict theory‚ to help

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    Are we who we thing we are? How do we know that we have not gone insane years ago? It’s these questions that may slowly start surfacing in the back of the reader’s mind as he proceeds to flip through the pages of Fight Club‚ written by Chuck Palahniuk in 1996. The story mainly takes place in an unspecified major city‚ which closely matches the setting of Wilmington‚ Delaware‚ and revolves around the life of a nameless narrator who is battling with insomnia. Inspired by his doctor’s exasperated remark

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    The Breakfast Club is a film about four different students-Allison‚ Claire‚ Andrew‚ John‚ and Brian - who come from different backgrounds and are serving a Saturday detention. After they get comfortable with one another’s presence‚ they all share their personal stories. Principal Vernon‚ who is powerful and strict‚ gives the students’ directions in order to write an essay describing who they think they are. The movie centers around the social divisions between high school students‚ labels that students

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    “The Breakfast Club: Claire the Princess” BY: Krizia Reyes Many people get sucked into the role or stereotypes that others impose on them but here’s to show that some people aren’t as always who they seem to be. One of the students in the film‚ “The Breakfast Club” shows a perfect example of stereotypes. This girl happens to be very popular and gets almost everything she wants‚ she’s living on a perfect life. She’s the “Princess”‚ the one that always has to look her best to impress everybody

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    Fight Club Film Analysis

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    Fight Club “Its only after we’ve lost everything are we free to do anything”‚ Tyler Durden as (Brad Pitt) states‚ among many other lines of contemplation. In Fight Club‚ a nameless narrator‚ a typical “everyman‚” played as (Edward Norton) is trapped in the world of large corporations‚ condominium living‚ and all the money he needs to spend on all the useless stuff he doesn’t need. As Tyler Durden says “The things you own end up owning you.” Fight Club is an edgy film that takes on such topics as

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    Fight Club and Masculinity In the film Fight Club (Fincher 1999) a nameless character is struggling to identify himself. He is an everyday man going to his job at the office and is becoming just another part in corporate America. Edward Norton plays this character that is nameless in the film but on script they call him Jack. Victimized and feminized by his culture‚ Jack seeks masculinity by fighting and by doing this he creates another personality of himself called Tyler. Tyler is everything

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    The Breakfast Club – Analysis Essay This past weekend I set out to accomplish this extra credit assignment. I viewed the task as just another mediocre film from the 80’s to watch for school. However‚ I can now say that I am utterly delighted to have viewed the Breakfast Club. This film eloquently covered every serious topic that a high school student has ever pondered: sex‚ social stratification‚ tobacco use‚ parental frustration‚ marijuana and even suicide. The film begins by an unlikely group

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    Conformity Conformity is a major theme in Fight Club‚ and there are a number of specific scenes that display the rejection of it and characters falling victim to it‚ sometimes unbeknownst to them. The Narrator‚ our main character‚ is a complex individual. He fits into almost every textbook example of social psychology. He is a complete nutcase. In fact‚ he is so incredibly insane‚ that he creates an imaginary friend with whom he transforms himself into a different person‚ free from the bonds of

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