Central Themes In Fitzgerald's Tender Is The Night

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Fitzgerald accommodates various central themes throughout his novel Tender is the Night. In the novel we witness one of the main characters, Dick, regress from being a man of great social stature who is portrayed as an exalted person whom we idolize as a reader, to a man who loses everything and has his life decimated by the end of the novel. This constructs one of the foremost themes of the novel, Dick’s transformation over the course of time. Additionally we see many people for the duration of the novel who have thoughts of affairs, actually carry out affairs, and those who just have abounding thoughts of affection for members of the opposite sex. Rosemary acquires fondness for many different men. Dick actually has an affair with Rosemary, …show more content…

In addition, the way Dick epitomizes a father figure to many women in the novel is a theme as well.
The central character in Tender is the Night, Dick Diver, starts out as someone whom we admire as a reader until his world falls apart in the end of the novel. Rosemary is infatuated with Dick in the beginning of the novel. Rosemary feels as if “Against his hard, neat brightness everything faded into the surety that he knew everything” (31). The characters in this novel are captivated by Dick’s mesmerizing personality; “to be included in Dick Diver’s world for a while was a remarkable experience” (27), “He won everyone quickly with an exquisite consideration and a politeness that moved so fast and intuitively that it could be examined only in its affect” (27-28). It is also expressed that “Dick’s attention seemed to paralyze” (33) McKisco while engaging in a conversation with him at one of his parties. But, this exalted version of Dick soon falls apart as the novel unfolds. In the beginning of the …show more content…

When Rosemary meets Earl Brady it is asserted that he “desired her” and that “so far as her virginal emotions went, she contemplated a surrender equanimity” even though she knew “she would forget him half an hour after she left him” (24). These types of feelings are a recurring emotion for Rosemary through the whole of the novel. She is oftentimes indulged in things with Dick that are not respectable among married couples. Dick is additionally accused of “having seduced [a patients] daughter” (187). Dick negates this accusation but we have reason to believe that he would commission something like this because of his actions with Rosemary. It is furthermore related that Dick “was in love with every pretty woman he saw now” (201). It is depicted that Nicole “was somewhat shocked at the idea of being interested in another man” but she says that “other women have lovers” so why can’t she (276). This portrays that many people of this time period were interested and even carried out affairs. It is even bluntly said that Nicole “did not want any vague spiritual Romance—she wanted an affair” (291) and she even “felt her lips’ warmth in the receiver as she welcomed [Tommy’s] coming” (290). Affairs are a ubiquitous and recurring theme throughout the

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