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Sunday, May 12, 2024

Belgian university enters new era with Taylor Swift course

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From Alice in Wonderland to The Great Gatsby, Rebecca to Jane Eyre, the songs of singer-songwriter Taylor Swift are filled with clear and subtle literary references.

Now, a literature professor in Belgium has seized on the bookish qualities of Swift’s lyrics to launch a course using the US superstar’s songs to delve into the greats of English writing and the themes of their work.

For Elly McCausland, an assistant professor at Ghent University, Swift’s songs offer an opportunity to explore feminism, for example through “The Man,” and the anti-hero trope through the aptly named song “Anti-Hero” from her 2022 album, “Midnights.”

American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift

McCausland decided earlier this year to mastermind a course to start in September inspired by Swift’s work after listening to “The Great War,” also from “Midnights.”

“The way she uses the war, like a metaphor for a relationship, made me a bit uncomfortable and it got me thinking about Sylvia Plath’s poem Daddy, which does a similar thing and also it’s very uncomfortable reading,” the academic told AFP.

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McCausland knew all too well the power of the singer’s work as a “real Swiftie” herself and insists that the course, “Literature (Taylor’s Version),” is a way to make literature “more accessible” and “not to create a Swift fan club.”

“The whole point is to get people to think that English literature is not a load of old books from a long time ago festering in a library. But it’s a living, breathing thing and it’s continually evolving and changing,” she said.

The academic stressed other artists and media could be used for the same goal, for example, Beyonce or even the video-sharing platform TikTok.

McCausland’s course uses Swift’s lyrics as a gateway into reading some of the greats of the literary canon such as William Shakespeare, Charlotte Bronte, Geoffrey Chaucer, and William Thackeray.

Swift refers to the works of several more writers, including Charles Dickens and Emily Dickinson, and McCausland noted parallels also with the style of other writers including British Romantic poets of the early 19th century.

In the songs “Wonderland” and “long story short”, Swift mentions going down a “rabbit hole”, a reference to Lewis Carroll’s 1865 novel “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

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