American Psycho

American Psycho

Infobox Book
name = American Psycho


image_caption = "American Psycho" UK issue cover
author = Bret Easton Ellis
cover_artist = Marshall Arisman
country = USA
language = English
series =
subject = brutal thriller
genre = Transgressional fiction, Novel
publisher = Vintage Books, New York
release_date = 1991
pages = 568
isbn = See Below

"American Psycho" is a thriller novel by Bret Easton Ellis published in 1991. It is a first-person narrative of the life of a wealthy young Manhattanite and self-professed psychopathic serial killer. The graphic violence and sexual content generated much commentary at the novel's release. A film adaptation was released in 2000 to mostly positive reviews [ [http://www.metacritic.com/video/titles/americanpsycho?q=american%20psycho Metacritic reviews for American Psycho] ] although the film was heavily edited and did not convey the graphic sex and violence scenes as literally as in the novel. That same year, Ellis approved emails collected under the title "AmPsycho 2000 Emails" that were sent from main character Patrick Bateman to his therapist. [ [http://www.briankotek.com/psycho/movie/am2000.cfm American Psycho Am.2000 Emails ] ] Users could sign up to receive these emails at Universal's website for the movie.

ynopsis

Set in Manhattan and beginning on April Fools' Day 1987, "American Psycho" spans roughly two years in the life of wealthy young investment banker Patrick Bateman. Bateman, 26 years old when the story begins, narrates his everyday activities, from his daily life among the upper-class elite of New York to his forays into murder by nightfall.

Bateman comes from a privileged background, having graduated from Philips Exeter Academy, Harvard (class of 1984), and then Harvard Business School (class of 1986). He works as a vice president at a Wall Street investment company and lives in an expensive Manhattan apartment on the Upper West Side. He embodies the 1980s yuppie culture. Through present tense stream-of-consciousness narrative he describes his conversations with colleagues in bars and cafes, his office, and nightclubs, satirizing the vanity of Manhattan yuppies.

The first third of the book contains no violence, and is simply an account of what seems to be a series of Friday nights, as Bateman documents traveling with his colleagues to a variety of nightclubs, where they snort cocaine, drink a variety of alcoholic beverages, critique fellow clubgoers' clothing, trade fashion advice, and question one another on proper etiquette.

Beginning with the second third of the book, Bateman begins to describe his day-to-day activities, which range from committing brutal violence (such as the torture of a young woman by trapping a rat in her cheese-smeared vagina) to such mundanities as renting videotapes and making dinner reservations. Bateman's stream of consciousness is occasionally broken up by chapters in which Bateman directly addresses the reader in order to critique the work of 1980s musicians, specifically Genesis, Huey Lewis and the News and Whitney Houston.

In addition to describing his daily life, Bateman also speaks at length about his love life. He is engaged to a fellow yuppie named Evelyn, though he possesses no deep feelings for anyone; additionally, he frequently solicits sex with attractive women ("hardbodies"), manipulates his secretary's feelings for him, and tries to avoid the attention of Luis, a closeted homosexual colleague who confesses his love for Patrick. Bateman also documents his relationship with his estranged family, including his senile mother, whom he visits to present with a pair of Ray-Ban Wayfarers while she lies semi-comatose in a nursing home, and his younger brother, a hedonistic college dropout (Sean Bateman, one of the protagonists from Ellis's earlier novel "The Rules Of Attraction").

As the book progresses, Bateman's grip on reality seems to begin deteriorating and his murders become increasingly violent and complex, going from simple acts of violence to drawn out sequences of torture, rape, mutilation, cannibalism, and necrophilia. He starts to randomly slip in stories about serial killers into his casual conversations, and at some points confesses these murders to his co-workers, who either react as if Bateman is simply joking with them and displaying his interest in a strange hobby, or completely misunderstand him ("murders and executions" is mistaken for "mergers and acquisitions"). As the book nears its conclusion, Bateman begins to describe such incidents as seeing a Cheerio interviewed on a talk show, being stalked by an anthropomorphic park bench, and being ordered to kill cats by a demonic ATM. These incidents both serve to demonstrate Patrick's mental state and to draw into question whether Bateman has actually committed any of the murders he has described, or whether or not he was insane from the start. At the end of the novel, he visits Paul Owen's apartment, where he has been stockpiling two mutilated female bodies; to his amazement, Bateman enters a perfectly clean, refurbished apartment with no trace of decomposing bodies and runs into a real-estate agent showing the apartment to prospective buyers. The most puzzling scene occurs in the final chapter where Bateman meets Harold Carnes, the colleague on whose answer-phone Bateman has previously confessed all his crimes; Carnes refuses to believe a word from the recorded confession. Challenged by Bateman on the disappearance of Paul Owen - a colleague whom Patrick Bateman hacked to death out of professional and sentimental jealousy - Carnes unexpectedly corroborates what Private Detective Donald Kimball had already claimed: that Paul Owen has not been murdered but has left for London. The reader is left to wonder whether any of the crimes depicted in the novel actually happened, or simply were the figments of a delusional psychotic.

The incipit of the book has Bateman staring at a graffiti on a Chemical Bank building, reading Abandon all hope ye who enter here, this phrase appears over the gates of hell in the Divine Comedy. The book ends with a scene similar to its beginning, as Bateman sits in a bar, staring at a sign that reads "THIS IS NOT AN EXIT". The opening, and closing phrases summarizes Bateman's life, his life is a living hell he cannot escape.

Characters

Major characters

* Patrick Bateman Investment Banker
* Evelyn Williams - Bateman's girlfriend
* Timothy Price - Bateman's best friend and colleague. Later appears as a teenager in Ellis' novel "The Informers".
* Paul Owen - Bateman's colleague
* Jean - Bateman's secretary (who is in love with him)
*Luis Carruthers - Co-worker who is in love with Bateman
*Courtney Lawrence - Luis's girlfriend who is having an affair with Bateman.
*Craig McDermott - Bateman's colleague, part of a social foursome (later a trio for most of the novel) alongside Bateman, Timothy Price and David Van Patten
* David Van Patten - Bateman's colleague, also part of Bateman's main social group

Minor characters

* Christie — A prostitute, employed and abused sexually on multiple occasions by Bateman
* Marcus Halberstam — Bateman's colleague; Paul Owen repeatedly mistakes Bateman for Marcus
* Donald Kimball — Private detective hired to investigate Paul Owen's disappearance
* Alison Poole — Sexually assaulted by Bateman, principal character from Ellis friend Jay McInerney's novel "Story of My Life"cite news | title = Allow Bret Easton Ellis to Introduce You to Alison Poole, A.K.A. Rielle Hunter | work = New York Magazine | date = 2008-08-06 | url = http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2008/08/allow_bret_easton_ellis_to_int.html | accessdate = 2008-08-06 ]
* Tom Cruise — Patrick Bateman shares an apartment block with Cruise, and encounters him in the building's elevator
* Sean Bateman — younger brother of Patrick Bateman and also the lead character of "The Rules of Attraction"
* Paul Denton — friend of Paul Owen, who also appears in "The Rules of Attraction" where he is romantically involved with Patrick's brother Sean.
* Christopher Armstrong — Bateman's colleague at Pierce & Pierce

Bateman's personality

On first appearance, Bateman exemplifies the image of the successful Manhattan executive; he is well-educated, wealthy, unusually popular with women, abreast of cultural trends, belongs to a prominent family, has a high-paying job, and lives in an upscale, chic apartment complex. Bateman passes for a refined, intelligent, thoughtful young man. Yet, contrary to his persona, he tortures and murders victims, practices violent sex, cannibalizes victims, and sexually penetrates body parts of corpses. For transportation, Bateman uses personal limousines to search for suitable victims in the streets.

Bateman is extremely style-conscious, and appears an expert in fashion and high-end consumer products. In his narrative, he obsessively describes his and other people's possessions in exhaustive detail, focusing particularly on attire, and even noting articles like pens, and pocket squares. He has a general tendency to pay more heed to the designer, place of purchase, and style of the items he describes, often ignoring the textile type or color. Bateman incisively answers his friends' and co-workers' queries, authoritatively explicating the difference between various types of mineral water, which tie knot is less bulky than a Windsor knot, and the proper way to wear a cummerbund, pocket square, or tie bar.

Patrick Bateman's employment at Piece & Piece is is apparently, unnecessary, as his father owns most of the business, this is something a transcript between Bateman and his ex-girlfriend reveals. Upon questioning, the sole justification for still working is, in his own words, "I... want... to... fit... in.". His response shows that, despite his extreme anti-sociality, Patrick longs for acceptance and admiration, without approval (e.g. through superior items), he means nothing to himself. Due to the fact that he doesn't need to work, he is supreme in his own world; he usually comes to work late—sometimes by more than an hour—and indulges in long lunches. Despite these advantages, Bateman's envy of his peers runs throughout the novel. In a scene in which characters compare business cards, Bateman panics when he realizes a friend's card is superior to his because it includes a watermark.

Murder descriptions

"American Psycho" has received much controversy for Ellis' graphic description of Patrick Bateman's murders. Many of Bateman's murders include some form of sexual abuse or torture by Bateman, in which graphic language is used to describe the scene. Many of the murders themselves involve various forms of mutilation, most including genital mutilation. Ellis also provides graphic descriptions of Bateman examing the internal organs of some of his victims after murdering them, as well as scenes where Bateman cooks and eats human body parts. Bateman at one point says that he tries to "make meat loaf out of the girl but it becomes too frustrating a task and instead I spend the afternoon smearing her meat all over the walls, chewing on strips of skin I ripped from her body...". Scenes involving Bateman taking a rat and forcing it inside a woman's body are described. Others include Bateman's murder of a young boy at the New York City Zoo. Many of the chapters involving the murders are simply entitled "Girl" or "Girls," further implying the brutal nature of Bateman's murders and his indifference to it all.These acts of brutality are seamlessly integrated into Patrick Bateman's life that the moral implications become irrelevant, this is believed to be a technique used by Bret Easton Ellis to portray society as desensitized.

Controversy

* The book was originally to have been published by Simon & Schuster in March 1991, but the company withdrew from the project because of the novel's content. Vintage Books purchased the rights to the novel and published an edited version of Ellis' original manuscript.
* Ellis received numerous death threats and hate mail after the publication of "American Psycho".cite journal
last = Messier
first = Vartan
year = 2005
title = Canons of Transgression: Shock, Scandal, and Subversion from Matthew Lewis's "The Monk" to Bret Easton Ellis's "American Psycho"
journal = Dissertation Abstracts International
volume = 43
issue = 4
pages = 1085 ff
url = http://grad.uprm.edu/tesis/messiervartan.pdf
format = pdf
(University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez). Chapter "Pornography and Violence: The Dialectics of Transgression in Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho" provides an in-depth analysis of the novel.] [imdb name|0254735|Bret Easton Ellis]
*Feminist activist Gloria Steinem was among those opposed to the release of Ellis' book because of its portrayal of violence towards women. Steinem is also the stepmother of Christian Bale, who portrayed Bateman in the film adaptation of the novel. This irony is mentioned in Ellis's mock memoir "Lunar Park".
*In Germany the book was deemed "harmful to minors", hence its sales and marketing were severely restricted from 1995 to 2000.
*In Australia the book is sometimes sold shrink-wrapped and is classified R18 under national censorship legislation. The book may not be sold to those under 18 years of age, otherwise criminal prosecution may result. Along with other Category 1 publications, its sale is theoretically banned in the state of Queensland. In Brisbane, the novel is available to those over eighteen from all public libraries and is still able to be ordered and purchased (shrink wrapped) from many book stores despite this prohibition. At the University of Queensland, the book is only available to students over 18, and is stored where it is not accessible to the public.
*In New Zealand, the Government's Office of Film & Literature Classification has rated the book as R18. The book may not be sold or lent in libraries to those under 18 years of age. It is generally sold shrink wrapped in bookstores.

International Standard Book Numbers (ISBNs)

* ISBN 0-671-66397-6 (hardcover, 1991)
* ISBN 0-679-73577-1 (paperback, 1991)
* ISBN 84-406-3712-8 (paperback, 2000)
* ISBN 2-02-025380-1 (paperback, 2000)
* ISBN 3-462-02261-X (paperback, 2000)
* ISBN 0-330-48477-X (paperback, 2000)
* ISBN 0-330-49189-X (paperback, 2002)
* ISBN 978-0-330-44801-7 (paperback, 2006)

ee also

* 2000 Film Version
* Aestheticization of violence
* Transgressional fiction

References

External links

* [http://www.briankotek.com/psycho/frame.html A long-running site and discussion forum dedicated to both the novel and movie for American Psycho]
* [http://www.briankotek.com/psycho/movie/am2000.cfm AmPsycho 2000 Emails by unnamed authors (approved by Ellis) which continued the story.]


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