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Saturday, April 12, 2025

April 12-13, 2025: A Great Gatsby Centennial: Fellow GatsbyStudiers

[On April 10th, 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby was published by Charles Scribner’s Sons. While I have my problems with Gatsby, it remains one of our most influential and important novels, and one that opens up so many AmericanStudies contexts. So this week I’ve highlighted a handful of them, leading up to this weekend post featuring fellow GatsbyStudiers!]

Four great public scholarly takes on Fitzgerald’s novel, and a request for more!

1)      Matthew Teutsch: My friend and online collaborator Matthew has written about Fitzgerald’s novel multiple times, but I particularly enjoyed the chance to read this multi-part account (part two is linked at the bottom) of his excellent Fulbright lecture on the book (and not because he engages so thoughtfully with my own takes, although I sure do appreciate that).

2)      Stephanie Powell Watts: In that lecture Matthew also engages with Watts’s take on the book in this LitHub piece, which remains one of the single most thoughtful intersections of autobiography and analysis I’ve ever encountered. A must-read!

3)      Wesley Morris: Morris’s intro to the 2021 Modern Library edition of the novel, reprinted by The Paris Review at that hyperlink, is also a must-read (honestly all four of these pieces are for anyone who wants to engage with Fitzgerald’s novel beyond its own stunning prose). I particularly like that he doesn’t take for granted our reading of the book—yes, it’s often assigned by teachers, including me, but we should still think long and hard about why we read it, as Morris models so thoughtfully here.

4)      Jillian Cantor: I tried to engage with Daisy Buchanan a lot and Myrtle Wilson a bit in my earlier posts this week, but there’s still much more to say about women in Fitzgerald’s novel, and Cantor’s LitHub piece says a great deal very powerfully.

5)      Add your suggestions (including your own work) here!

Next series starts Monday,

Ben

PS. What do you think? Takes on Fitzgerald’s novel or its contexts, yours or others’?

2 comments:

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  2. PPS. Adding a couple ones from the centennial week:

    Wesley Lowery for ContrabandCamp on Gatsby's racial secret:

    https://www.contrabandcamp.com/p/gatsbys-secret

    And Benjamin Dreyer for his newsletter on evocative adverbs:

    https://benjamindreyer.substack.com/p/do-they-miss-me-she-cried-ecstatically

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