This five-week course examines F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (1925) as a distinctive and provocative entry in the American gangster fiction tradition. This course asks students to consider how Gatsby inhabits and complicates the genre, offering a story in which the gangster is not simply a criminal protagonist but a symbol of the American Dream itself. Through close reading, literary analysis, and contextual discussion, learners will explore how Fitzgerald uses character, language, structure, and symbolism to depict ambition, identity, class, and the limits of self-invention in Jazz Age America.

Gangster Fiction: The Gangster American Dream
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What you'll learn
Academic Track: Analyze how literary techniques and historical context construct a text's meaning and its relationship to genre conventions.
Community Track: Lead discussions that connect conflict in stories to lived experience and explain why narrative shapes sense making.
Creative Track: Use techniques from literature and art to develop a creative voice that carries enduring human themes into original, resonant work.
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June 2026
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There are 5 modules in this course
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Status: PreviewUniversity of Colorado Boulder
Status: Free TrialDartmouth College
Status: Free TrialDartmouth College
Status: Free TrialDartmouth College
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