30 pages • 1 hour read
F. Scott FitzgeraldA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The reverse-aging premise of “Benjamin Button” allows Fitzgerald to explore time and its relation to human aging. There are multiple strands of time in the text: historical time, personal time, remembered time, and what one might call metaphysical time.
The personal strand is the one Fitzgerald pulls, teasing it out by running one character’s aging experience in reverse while those around him age normally. Historical, personal, and metaphysical time are usually all in accordance. “Personal time” is the aging process, the natural evolution of an individual who is born and grows, reaches a prime, slowly declines, and finally dies. “Metaphysical time” is the foundation, the eternal flux, the flowing passage, that the individual experiences as aging. Metaphysical time moves in one direction only. Benjamin Button is moving forward in time but backward in age. Readers can confirm that he’s moving forward in time by looking at the progression of “historical time” marked in wars and technological changes that affect Benjamin and everyone else around him. Readers can contrast this depiction with Martin Amis’ novel Time’s Arrow in which time moves backward and where death is the birth of each character equally. Time itself is not reversed in “Benjamin Button”; only aging is.
By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Babylon Revisited
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Bernice Bobs Her Hair
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Crazy Sunday
F. Scott Fitzgerald
May Day
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Tender Is the Night
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Beautiful and Damned
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Diamond as Big as the Ritz
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Last Tycoon
F. Scott Fitzgerald
This Side of Paradise
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Winter Dreams
F. Scott Fitzgerald