Popular Culture Review Vol. 21, No. 2, Summer 2010 | Page 100

96 Popular Culture Review existential angst. Likewise, those who join Fight Club and graduate to Project Mayhem ultimately undergo the same existential cleansing process. What’s more is the process by which the soap is made. The most important ingredient is human fat, “liposuctioned fat sucked out of the richest thighs in America. The richest, fattest thighs in the world” (150). After a tedious process of boiling and skimming, the finished product materializes into soap, sold at twenty dollars a bar for the Paper Street Soap Company. The fact that this soap made from human fat can also represent the idea that the solution to existential angst is already found within oneself. Everything that the protagonist needs in order to get over his problem is already within him vis-a-vis his own self commitment and action. Following his excruciating encounter with lye (a chemical bum), the protagonist carries around a constant reminder of the importance of soap in the form of a kiss-shaped scar on his hand. Again, as Tyler puts it, “Soap and human sacrifice go hand in hand" (75). With their soap production at its height, the Paper Street Soap Company becomes the financial driving force behind Project Mayhem. And for their big climax—blowing up civilization to create something better—soap again is at the core. With a re-writing of history in his plans, Tyler proclaims, “With enough soap you could blow up the whole world” (73). This iiberdestructive vision for soap reveals the breadth of its reach within the narration. In order to “blow up the world” and start anew, soap is the catalyst. It’s precisely this imagery facing the protagonist as he breaks away from his now realized Doppelganger in Tyler, effectively blowing up his own world. This coup de grace of sorts marks a new beginning, which parallels the conclusion of “Childhood of a Leader”: “A clock struck noon; Lucien rose. The metamorphosis was complete: a graceful, uncertain adolescent had entered this cafe one hour earlier; now a man left, a leader among the French” (144). Just as the clock strikes noon for Lucien, Fight Club's protagonist finds himself at the midway point of his own life. From his insomnia and IKEA lifestyle to the support groups to the eventual rise and fall of his commitment in Fight Club and Project Mayhem, the protagonist undergoes the typical Sartrean existentialist journey: angst followed by a quest for meaning, and action and commitment followed by a new sense of self and purpose. This syntagmatic parallel reveals that despite the drastic differences in the paradigms—instead of the public park and chestnut trees found in Nausea, there is a dilapidated building on Paper Street and homemade soap—Palahniuk’s underlying philosophy echoes that of Sartre’s existentialism. And so, like Lucien Fleurier and Antoine Roquentin who preceded him, Fight Club's protagonist will live on in existential lore, freshly scrubbed with Paper Street soap. University of Virginia Joshua Mason Bibliography Bennett, Robert. “The Death of Sisyphus: Existential Literature and the Cultural Logic in