teaching

English Literature (Taylor’s Version): Seminar 2

In English Literature (Taylor's Version) seminar 2 - titled 'This Ain't a Fairytale: Chivalry and the Knight in Shining Armour' - we looked at the anonymous 14th century poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, written in Middle English (though we used the excellent Simon Armitage poetic translation). Students had also watched the 2021 film The Green Knight - a very free adaptation of the poem by filmmaker David Lowery and starring Dev Patel - in advance of the seminar, and were asked to write either a short opinion piece on the film, or their thoughts on the idea of chivalry. [Click the above image to read more]

teaching

English Literature (Taylor’s Version): Seminar 1

In the first seminar of English Literature (Taylor's Version) at Ghent University, we looked at four reasons to study Taylor Swift's work alongside English literature. [Click the image above to read more.]

Essay

Baited hooks and silly books: why Taylor Swift is the new Gothic novel

‘Too many young women yearn for annihilation’, reads the clickbaity subtitle of Mary Harrington’s article ‘The Dark Truth about Taylor Swift’. Published on 16 August 2023, Harrington’s piece observes a troubling tendency in young women towards ‘a craving for romantic transcendence that’s difficult to distinguish from self-destruction’: in other words, an obsession with, and yearning for, love affairs made all the more intense by the knowledge that they are doomed to failure (such as Jack and Rose from Titanic, or Romeo and Juliet). Harrington attributes some of Swift’s popularity to the fact that her oeuvre satisfies this desire: her best songs are about romantic liaisons that don’t end well (‘got a history of stories ending sadly’). Harrington then goes on to link this to thirteenth-century France and the massacre of the Cathar sect of Christianity, who saw our incarnated world as fundamentally evil and longed to escape the ‘prison’ of flesh to return to unity with God. Following their persecution during the Albigensian Crusade, the Cathars’ beliefs went underground and spawned what we now know as ‘courtly love’ literature. 

Essay

Help, I’m still at Satis House: reclaiming female stasis

Everybody moved on/I, I stayed there/Dust collected on my pinned-up hair In Chapter 8 of Charles Dickens’s classic novel Great Expectations (1861), the anxious young Pip is led by his playmate Estella to meet the mysterious Miss Havisham at her home, Satis House. Upon entering, Pip finds himself ‘in a pretty large room, well lighted… Continue reading Help, I’m still at Satis House: reclaiming female stasis