Catch Me If You Can
- Genre: Nonfiction; Autobiography/Memoir
- Originally Published: 1980
- Reading Level/Interest: College/Adult
- Structure/Length: 10 chapters; approx. 277 pages; approx. 8 hours, 30 minutes on audio
- Central Concern: Con artist and check-forger Frank Abagnale details the various crimes he committed from 1964 to 1969, between the ages of 16 and 21.
Frank Abagnale, Stan Redding, Authors
- Frank Abagnale Bio: Born in 1948 in Bronxville, NY; runs a consultancy firm; worked as a professional con artist, disguising himself as a copilot, doctor, lawyer, FBI agent, and professor; his memoir inspired a 2002 film directed by Steven Spielberg and a Broadway musical
- Other Works by Frank Abagnale: The Art of the Steal (2001); Stealing Your Life (2007); Scam Me if You Can (2019)
CENTRAL THEMES connected and noted throughout this Teaching Unit:
- Social Scripts and Performance
- Gender Privilege and the Use of Women
- Identity and Self-Construction
STUDY OBJECTIVES: In accomplishing the components of this Unit, students will:
- Gain an understanding of social contexts regarding privilege-associated professions that enabled Frank Abagnale to get away with his crimes.
- Make connections between the text’s theme of Gender Privilege and Frank Abagnale’s exploitation of women and leveraging of male privilege in order to succeed in his schemes.
- Discuss the potential effects of writing a memoir for a con man like Abagnale and how he has constructed himself as a larger than life figure through viewing paired texts and thinking about popular media portrayals of crime.