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“The curious case of Benjamin Button”. Analysis of the character: Benjamin Button

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“The curious case of Benjamin Button”. Analysis of the character: Benjamin Button
National Economics University
Faculty of Business English

LITERATURE IN ENGLISH

Analysis the symbol of character Benjamin Button in the short story “The curious case of Benjamin Button” by F Scott Fitzgerald.

Name Nguyen Thi Phuong
Student’s code CQ510729
Class BEA - K51
Teacher MA Tran Minh Chau

There are many rules in life that never change. And those for certain are birth, old, sickness and death; things that we cannot avoid. What will happen if you are out of all rules and even go backward with all of natural development in life? How will people treat to you and how can you live a simple life? Those are all answered in a famous short story of F Scott Fitzgerald, “The curious case of Benjamin Button”, an extraordinary story about a man named Benjamin Button.
Spirited by a quote of Mark Twain: “Life will certainly happier if we can be born at the age of 80 and gradually come to the age of 18”, Fitzgerald successfully built an image of an odd man to be born with the appearance of a 70-year-old man, as time passes; he becomes younger and younger till the end of his life as an infant. The image of the protagonist Benjamin is considered as a clear evidence for all timeless values as well as the desire of human to against the arrangement of creator. Can Love and Life be changed when everything changes unexpectedly?
First, the image of main character Benjamin Button was typically built in a strange way that no one ever did before. It is not a normal case of birth, there are elements of conflict from the start, since we know there is something strange going on when the narrator refers to the “astonishing history” he’s about to impart. Benjamin is born at the moment of the end of the Second World War, when everyone burst into happiness of independence and in the urge expectation of his father, Mr Roger Button. But the creator’s ordination is never perfect, Benjamin has to suffer others’ discrimination,

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