Fight Club Lesson 6

Fight Club
Lesson 6
Mood 
1 / 22
volgende
Slide 1: Tekstslide
EngelsMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 4

In deze les zitten 22 slides, met tekstslides.

time-iconLesduur is: 60 min

Onderdelen in deze les

Fight Club
Lesson 6
Mood 

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

In Class Today
Summary & Analysis Chapter 10-13
Mood

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Mood
 In literature, mood is a literary element that evokes certain feelings or vibes in readers through words and descriptions. 

Usually, mood is referred to as the atmosphere of a literary piece, as it creates an emotional setting that surrounds the readers.

Slide 3 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

What type of mood does the author create throughout the novel?

Slide 4 - Tekstslide

- Dark, brooding, reflective
Chapter 10 - Summary
The Narrator assists Tyler during his work as a waiter in a hotel. Tyler urinates in a dish of soup, and he targets the dishes that’ll be served to particularly rich, powerful people.

"Tyler and me, we've turned into the guerrilla terrorists of the service industry." (Ch.10, p.81)

Slide 5 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 10 - Analysis
The passage is very unclear about whether or not the Narrator is also a waiter at the hotel (more foreshadowing of the Narrator’s connection to Tyler). Tyler is presented as someone both “wise” and childish, both aggressively confident and condescendingly cruel.

Slide 6 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 11 - Summary
We learn that Tyler makes good money selling his soaps to fancy stores—people say his soap is the best they’ve ever used.

Tyler and the Narrator sit by a used car lot, surrounded by old vehicles. The Narrator explains that he and Tyler can’t go home right now, because Marla has come by the house and accused the Narrator of “cooking her mother.”

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 11- Analysis
Stores and customers have no idea how savage and violent Tyler is; society is so obsessed with “nice” appearances that it ignores the ugly truths lurking beneath the surface.


Slide 8 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 11 - Summary
Earlier that night, Marla came to the house with a huge package, that she wanted to put it in the freezer. She insisted that the Narrator had told her she could—something that the Narrator angrily denies. Marla is holding: sandwich bags full of rendered human fat—collagen. 


Slide 9 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 11 - Summary
Later that night, the Narrator learns the truth from Tyler: whenever Marla’s mother has a liposuction, she has the fat stored, in case she needs collagen injections. When Marla’s mother has extra fat, she sends it to Marla.

Tyler proudly tells the Narrator that he’s been making a fortune with Marla’s collagen—he uses it to make soap.

Slide 10 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

What do you think the author is trying to say with this passage?

Slide 11 - Tekstslide

Tyler's darker side becomes more apparent and is affecting the Narrator.
Chapter 11 - Analysis
Tyler is essentially “recycling” people: converting them back into products and objects. But the conceit of the chapter also alludes to the way that the human body itself has become a product: an object that can be improved and beautified with injections and surgeries. 

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 12 - Summary 
The Narrator sits at his desk at work. The Narrator realizes that his car company is going to have to institute a recall—a rarity. 

But last week, the Narrator thinks, his company declined to institute a recall for a very serious mistake: leather interiors that caused horrible birth defects. 

The company didn’t recall their product because the cost of a recall was greater than the cost of paying off the hundreds of harmed families.

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

What do you think the car company might symbolize?

Slide 14 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 12 - Analysis
The car company’s actions symbolize the total amorality of corporations: the company intentionally allows some lives to be lost in order to save some money, because making money is the corporation’s only goal.

Slide 15 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 12 - Summary
Over the weekend, the Narrator goes to his testicular cancer support group and finds Bob there—but nobody else. Bob, excited to see the Narrator, tells the Narrator that the group has disbanded—everybody has joined a new group, the first rule of which is that “you aren’t suppossed to talk about it.” The founder of this group, Bob says, is a “great man,” “Tyler Durden.”

Slide 16 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 12 - Analysis
Bob has joined fight club, too, though he seems not to realize that the Narrator is one of the founders. The fact that the testicular cancer support group has joined fight club reinforces the link between death, violence, and masculinity: near death, Bob and his peers fight to celebrate their manhood and the sheer fact of being alive.

Slide 17 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 13 - Summary
The Narrator shows up at Marla’s hotel;  She says she’ll forgive the Narrator for the collagen incident if he investigates the lump on her breast—she’s afraid it’s cancer. 

The incident reminds the Narrator of how, long ago, he went to a medical school to have a wart removed from his penis. During his time there, the doctors noticed the birthmark on his ankle—a birthmark that they at first thought was a new, lethal form of cancer. Disappointed, the doctors removed the wart and let the Narrator go.

Slide 18 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 13 - Analysis
Marla seems to treat the Narrator as a close confidant, and yet, based on the novel’s depiction of Marla so far, her request for a “breast examination” seems more like a sexual flirtation. To reinforce such an ambiguity, the passage mentions another instance in which sex and death are closely tied (the wart on the Narrator’s penis). 

Slide 19 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 13 - Summary
The Narrator continues to examine Marla’s breasts; as he does, he tries to make Marla laugh. He tells her a story about a woman who married a mortician; the mortician forced her to soak herself in ice water and lie perfectly still immediately before he had sex with her. 

As he tells the story, The Narrator thinks about the birthmark on his foot—a birthmark that could have been cancer. He also notices that Marla has “Tyler’s kiss” on the back of her hand.

Slide 20 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Chapter 13 - Analysis
The Narrator is genuinely trying to cheer Marla up, since he’s afraid that she’s actually going to die of cancer (and even the Narrator’s jokes underscore the close connection between sex and dying). 

The passage also contrasts two different marks: Tyler’s kiss and the birthmark. The former is a symbol of loyalty to fight club, acceptance of pain and sacrifice, and collectivism (since, now, other people have the same “kiss”), while the latter is a symbol of the Narrator’s individuality and uniqueness.

Slide 21 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies

Homework
Tuesday: read chapters 14-17
and answer the following question:

What is Project Mayhem?

Slide 22 - Tekstslide

Deze slide heeft geen instructies