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Fictional resistance movements and groups commonly appear in dystopian fiction, opposing the tyranny which dominates the setting. In Chuck Palahniuk's ''Fight Club'', the tyranny is the soul-destroying life of modern western society. The protagonist rebels against this by organising atavistic bare-knuckle fights and then by leading ''Project Mayhem'' to destroy civilization. This story developed themes of alienation and anti-consumerism seen in earlier works such as ''Rebel without a Cause'' and ''The Prisoner'' with the epic, millennial quality of other contemporary works such as ''The Matrix''. ==List of fictional resistance movements and groups== * Blake's 7 — eponymous rebels against the Terran Federation. * The Brotherhood — the subversive opposition to The Party in George Orwell's ''Nineteen-Eighty Four''. * Maquis — resistance to the Cardassians in ''Star Trek''. * Rebel Alliance — the senators who wish to depose the Emperor and restore the Republic in ''Star Wars''. * Robin Hood — mythical leader of an English band of outlaws opposed to the Sheriff of Nottingham. * Song Jiang — leader of outlaws during the Song Dynasty and fictionalised in the ''Water Margin'' 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Fictional resistance movements and groups」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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