Dick Diver in Tender is the Night
I really enjoyed reading Tender is the Night, but the main character, Dick Diver, confuses me. What confuses me is how Fitzgerald intended to make the reader feel about Dick Diver. Were we supposed to sympathie with him? Were we supposed to like him? Dislike him? Etc.
SPOILERS
Personally, I found him a very dislikable character. I found him arrogant and self-absorbed, a man who, when it came down to it, was selfish. And he's a blatant racist, which really sealed how I felt towards him. I don't know if I am supposed to just think, "he was a product of his time, everyone was a racist, it's no big deal," but I can't do that (one reason being that line of thought not being in any way tue notwithstanding). Lines like, "He's a spic," ". . . this was a Bahama Negro, conceited and unpleasant. . ." "You dirty Wops!" and by far the worst, "Look here, you mustn't get upset over this-it's only some nigger scrap." Now, I could forgive the first lines, but the last one (referring to the murdered black man who was just trying to help) is so mean and hateful.
In the end, I was glad to see his fall from grace, and quite frankly, would have liked to seen him end up worse off than he did. Dick Diver also supposedly being heavily based on Fitzgerald himself seems odd. Did Fitgerald really want to portray himself in this light? Or was he just being honest?
So, is there an intended feeling that is supposed to be felt towards Dick Diver, or is it up to interpretation (as I assume this is the case)? It seems to me Nicole is by far the character I sympathized with more.
If Dick Diver was a racist, then so were most caucasions in ...
the 20s and 30s. Most of the members of my family used the N word liberally. I am glad I got out of the southern millieu that looked down upon blacks and were disrespectful in their treatment of them. But it did happen ... and not only in southern families, but northern ones as well. If it upsets you to read about what was the norm in the 20s and 30s, perhaps you shouldn't read it. It did happen, and complaining about it 70 years after doesn't do any good. It was the norm thrn, but we have come a long way since that time.
Dick Diver was a flawed character and Scott Fitzgerald was flawed himself. Zelda was unfaithfull to him as Nicole eventually was to Dick Diver, and as Diver was to Nicole. The analogy at the end of the novel to U.S. Grant explicitely explains Diver's feelings .... being called upon to save Nicole, then dismissed back into the position of a non-entity.
No matter what your feelings are about the book, it is one of the greatest pieces of modern American literature. As for myself, I try to understand what happens in a novel as a part of the times in which it was written. I just want tounderstand, not have empathy for a fictional character.