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How ‘Fight Club’ Became the Ultimate Handbook for Men’s Rights Activists

When it was released in 1999, Fight Club was seen by many critics as a damning statement about consumerist culture, the de-humanizing roles forced on men by American capitalism, and the excesses of masculinity. In fact, Empire described the movie adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk’s novel as possessing “a great deal of sick humor at the expense of masculinist ideals and white-collar society.” Its director, David Fincher, was largely lauded for having captured the zeitgeist.

But the legacy of Fight Club may end up being quite different. In the decade and a half or so after its release and reception as a cult classic, Fight Club has been embraced by the loose collection of radical online male communities (known as the “manosphere”) as a kind of gospel text.

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Members of these groups, who congregate around sites like Return of Kings, Masculine Empire, and The Red Pill subreddit, attribute the ills of Western society to the decline of traditional gender roles. All of them—pick-up artists and men’s rights activists alike—share a deeply ingrained hostility towards women, and more importantly, feminism. Think articles titled “Five reasons you should date a girl with an eating disorder.”

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