On success, rejection, and the roles of social communities in our lives.
From the opening
scene of David Fincher’s The Social Network (2010),
the film (scripted by Aaron Sorkin) links two distinct narratives to one another:
Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg)’s pursuit of admission to one of Harvard’s
elite Finals Clubs and his relationship with his girlfriend Erica. When both of
these quests end in failure—Erica has dumped him by the end of the opening
scene, and not long after he is denied by his chosen Finals Club (while his roomate and co-Facebook
founder Eduardo is “punched”)—the joint rejections provide the direct
impetus for Zuckerberg’s creation of Facebook, which the film depicts from its
earliest iteration as, at one and the same time, a misogynist “ranking of girls”
and an alternative, more democratic kind of Harvard community than the elitist
clubs.
Whatever its grounding
in the realities of Zuckerberg’s and Facebook’s stories, this narrative
origin point provides a powerful duality for the film’s overall arc and themes:
an image of “the social network” as based on both personal grievance and
communal appeal, the worst and best sides of human identity and relationships. Moreover,
these dual narratives nicely construct two sides to Zuckerberg himself: he
benefits from the contrast with the Finals Clubs, which are portrayed (with
some accuracy, as I also noted in Monday’s post) as elitist and cut-off
from the rest of the community; but comes off looking far worse in his
relationship with and payback toward Erica. That duality also informs
Zuckerberg’s two most lasting professional relationships in the film: with the elite and snobby
Winklevoss twins, in relation to whom Zuckerberg is mostly portrayed as a
hero; and with the sympathetic
and eventually aggrieved Eduardo, toward whom the film’s Zuckerberg behaves
much more like a villain.
I think these dualities also have a great deal of resonance with our
broader narratives of higher education. After all, every experience of higher
ed—an experience that more
Americans now share than at any prior point in our history—begins with a
moment defined by acceptance and rejection, by whether these communities
welcome us into them or deny us entrance. On one level, that moment and process
are distinct from, or at least more overt than, any other such decisions in our
lives. But on another, they parallel many of our other social relationships—not
only with dating and significant others, relationships which inevitably lead (as
Zuckerberg came to realize) to either acceptance or rejection; but also with
possible jobs and careers, with professional and social organizations, indeed
with any community
of voluntary affiliation. We’re all part of social networks, and that
membership is almost always contingent and fragile—a fact captured concisely in
the world of higher education.
Next Harvard movie tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think? Other images of Harvard or higher ed you’d
highlight?
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