Fight Club and Marxist Media theory

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Marxism and the Media A Level Media Studies. ***Key Terms*** Capitalism an ideology emphasises the importance for people in a society to be free to create.
Advertisements

Karl Marx and the Rise of Communism
Media Criticism. The Economic Model In the United States, media institutions and the products they create can be analyzed from the perspective of Capitalism.
Animal Farm is an allegory Allegory: A story in which the characters, places and events mean something else, often a real life event. Allegories make.
In Em Griffin, A First Look at Communication Theory, 6th ed.
L11 - L12: Revolutionary Changes in Economic Life: Marxism Agenda Objective: 1.To understand the theory, principles, and ideas of Marxism as laid out by.
Karl Marx’ Communist Theory
Week 2: Major Worldviews January 10, 2007
Marx (and Engels!) LSJ 362 Fall Karl Marx ( ) Lived at time of great social transformations in Europe Active in 1840’s political movement.
LIBERALISM AND SOCIALISM Ideologies of the state.
1. What is Marxism in Sociology? 2. Supermarket Shopping: An Analogy with Marxist Theory 3. Discussion with Diagram : Shopping/Marxism 4. Coffee Break.
Marxist Criticism. Literary Theory and Criticism Literary theory and criticism are interpretive tools that help us think more deeply and insightfully.
The Government "isms" You have two cows….
Karl Heinrich Marx The Legend. The Story.. KARL MARX German Philosopher -Economist and journalist -Wrote the Communist Manifesto -Father of.
Fr. Karl Marx’s The German Ideology (also Friedrich Engels)
Fight Club and Queer Theory
Karl Marx and modern day society L/O: To understand key concepts in Marxism and begin to relate them to our own society and citizenship. Who are society’s.
Critical Theories: Marxist and Materialist Theory.
Marxist Literary Criticism Kyle Connor Melissa Luster Lawder Paul.
Marxism “Marxism is the theory of how the normality of our everyday world, … its workday habits and its working day, its monetary stresses and pressures.
 Holden is very lonely, and most of the novel shows him attempting to find company or dwelling on the fact that he is lonely- “practically the whole.
Marxist Feminism and the Family By Leanne, Catherine, Claire and Ruosi.
Marxist Criticism. Georg Hegel ( ): The human mind begins with a thesis ( say, past tense in English is “-ed” ) that may produce an antithesis.
MARXIST CRITICISM. KARL MARX  Karl Heinrich Marx (5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, sociologist, historian, journalist,
Karl Marx & Marxism. biography  Born 1818 in French/German town of Trier  Jewish extraction  Studied philosophy and economics in Berlin  Married Jenny.
Marxist Theory.
INTRODUCTION TO MARXISM. In order to understand his criticism, you need to understand the conditions that he lived in Long hours, low pay Periodic unemployment.
Reaction and Reform: New Economic Theories
Theory & Research Traditions Meeting 2. Dependency Theory Ideological role of media is part of economic relations (Marxist view) In relationship of dependency,
Lit Crit Round Two: Marxist and Feminist Lit Crit
Storey Intro and the Frankfurt School.  “To share a culture is to interpret the world– to make it meaningful in recognizably similar ways... [however]
The Industrial Revolution
School & Society: 3 Perspectives1 The Relation of School to Society: Three School of Thought Functionalism –Schools socialize and adopt students to the.
AN INTRODUCTION TO MARXIST THEORY
Historical context late 1930s & early 1940s The New Deal class politics the masses or the workers the rise of Fascism impending war “yellow journalism”
Media and Ideology. What do we mean by ideology in common parlance?
Analytical “paradigms” dominance-subordination conformity-resistance resistance-incorporation all of the above can apply at the same time.
Marxism History is the judge — its executioner, the proletarian.
Critical Theory, Cultural Marxism, and “Political Correctness”
Classless: an introduction to Marxism. Karl Marx Philosopher from Germany Published books such as: Communist Manifesto and Das Kapital Was exiled from.
Marxism & the family “Families support capitalism by producing future workers to be exploited.” Zaretsky 1976.
NEW WAYS OF THINKING CAPITALISMVCOMMUNISM Students analyze the effects of the Industrial Revolution in England, France, Germany, Japan, and the.
UK Government and Politics Unit 1 People and Politics.
Choose a category. Click to begin. You will be given the question. You must give the correct answer.
IN CANADIAN SOCIETY 3. Views on Canadian Society 4. Growing Trends in Canadian Society.
A Marxist Critical Lens “All people are born alike – except republicans and democrats.” – Groucho Marx By Kate Munsell, Natalie Gill, Kelly Cannon and.
Issues for Canadians Chapter 1 How effectively does Canada’s federal political system govern Canada for all Canadians?
MARXIST CRITICISM. KARL MARX  Karl Heinrich Marx (5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, sociologist, historian, journalist,
Cultural Hegemony. Antonio Gramsci Like Althusser, he thought ideology was not so directly related to economics but a human process Devised term Hegemony.
Philosophical Chairs.
Karl Marx and the Rise of Communism
Bellringer: Dec. 11 Write this down in your notebook and ANSWER the question. Give an example and explain how that example helps prove your answer. Why.
Cultural Marxism The Theory of Hegemony.
SOCIOLOGY Causes of Inequality (3). Meritocracy  Meritocracy – the most hard-working and talented members of society are rewarded the most, the top jobs.
Broadcasting: Concepts and Contexts Ideology, Discourse, Hegemony and Representation.
Starter- What do these images have to do with Marxist theory?
CULTURAL STUDIES In Em Griffin, A First Look at Communication Theory, 6th ed. Stuart Hall.
Lit Crit Round Two: Marxist and Feminist Lit ~define Marxist Lit Crit ~define “false consciousness” ~define “ideology” ~define “reification” ~define “patriarchy”
Soc. 118 Media, Culture & Society Chapter Five: Media and Ideology.
Representation Ryan, Gemma and Phil. Karl Marx and his ideas “The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives.
Key Media theory A2 MEST 3 revision.
Capitalism, Marxism and Communism
Introduction to Sociology
Structural theories – conflict theory
Socialism.
The requirement for candidates is to be able to write about the representation of a specific social group they have studied across media (such as ‘youth’)
Key Ideas Marx was interested in the impact of capitalism on society. Through observations of industrialised Victorian society he noted a number of things:
Pluralism Polyarchy – many groups have power in society; no one group dominates and all have power through the act of voting in representatives who.
The purpose of education continued
Sociological Criticisms
Presentation transcript:

Fight Club and Marxist Media theory

Objective Understand how to analyse Fight Club from a Marxist media perspective

Marxism says: SMASH THE SYSTEM! At the heart of Marxism, there is a dialectic – a binary opposition – a linked pair of ideas. On the one hand, you have capitalism, the ideology wherein gaining capital – or wealth – is the basis for society. This leads to society being hierarchical. On the other you have communism, where the common good, and equality, are the basis of society. This leads to society being homogeneous – similar at all levels. Marxism says: SMASH THE SYSTEM!

Key ideas of Marxism 1. Individuals have sold their capacity to make other people money – generating capital or wealth - by working in a job. This is an unfair relationship as their employers make more money from it than they do. 2. The people in power seek to maintain this relationship because it means they have a way of controlling everyone (they can always refuse to pay you). 3. If only we woke up and realised this was the case, and changed things in our favour, the world would be a better place entirely. Marxist media theory says that we cannot trust the media, because they are run by the people in power, and therefore maintain the status quo, rather than being agents for change.

Marxism and the Media The Media are agents of capitalism. They present a popular viewpoint and ignore unpopular ideas. Films / TV programmes are repetitive to give the public what they want – soothing them, and keeping them in fear (news?) – while telling them to buy things. They amplify society’s ideals, and reflect what the world is like. In this sense they cannot ever ‘change’ anything. It is up to the individual to reject the media and seek out his/her own opinion.

Therefore the major tenet is... To create, we have to destroy (you can’t criticise anything unless you first adopt the arguments of the thing you want to criticise)

Fight Club is the gun to the head of consumerist America Fight Club is the gun to the head of consumerist America. The pistol's cocked. Say what you will about the explicit nature of the fight scenes, or director Fincher's tendency to trip up his storytelling with his fixation on stylism -- he wants us to stop reading the J. Crew catalogue, turn off "Must See TV," and ask what the hell our lives really mean. - Robert Zimmer

How can we view Fight Club from a Marxist perspective? Tyler Durden = revolutionary If this is a Marxist document, why are there rules of Fight Club? Why is Fight Club, itself an agent of Marxist change, seeking to assert its own dominance and hierarchical structure? How far should we take the film seriously as a manifesto for political change?

Fight Club and Marxism The narrator is a card-carrying member of capitalist society, until he rejects the aspirational ideals of his way of life and chooses their binary opposite. Before, his home was a perfect replica of a catalogue. After, he squatted in a derelict house in a run-down area of town. Before, he cared about his appearance and wore designer clothes; he fitted in. After, he took care to disfigure himself; he stood out. Before, he was a nameless individual. After, he had invented multiple personalities for himself.

Hegemony in Fight Club Hegemony = unnatural dominance of one social class over another, made to seem natural and normal by (implied) consent 'Consent must be constantly won and rewon, for people's material social experience constantly reminds them of the disadvantages of subordination and thus poses a threat to the dominant class... Hegemony... posits a constant contradiction between ideology and the social experience of the subordinate that makes this interface [the media] into an inevitable site of ideological struggle’ (Fiske, 1992) Therefore, Fight Club makes this contradiction explicit, and is therefore itself an agent of the struggle against hegemony

An apparent contradiction OK, so this is a film (a media product) which seeks to change the system by showing us how it’s supposed to be. It’s financed by big business (Fox) so... It uses big business (multinational film/cinema corporations) to explore the very ideas that seek to destroy big business. WHY?

How can we apply Marxism to Fight Club?