Essay

Is it ‘Actually Romantic’ to renounce one’s feminism?

Now that the glitter has settled on The Life of a Showgirl’s release, and I’ve spent enough time on Reddit fan forums and the comments section of Instagram to feel that I’ve gained both a comprehensive overview of audience reactions and a deep, visceral need to go outside and touch some grass, I wanted to… Continue reading Is it ‘Actually Romantic’ to renounce one’s feminism?

Essay

The peak before the prison house: Swift, Wordsworth, and the Romantic child

Taylor Swift opens ‘the lakes’, a bonus track from her 2020 album folklore, with the line ‘is it romantic’, and then goes on to pun about William Wordsworth and allude to the British Romantic poets, who were known for being inspired by the Lake District. However, it’s not actually Swift’s most Romantic song — not… Continue reading The peak before the prison house: Swift, Wordsworth, and the Romantic child

Essay · Student work

Taylor Swift: The New Romantic Poet

In this essay by high school student Anthony Daans (who kindly allowed me to give some feedback on his project), he argues for Taylor Swift as a modern Romantic poet, while also exploring some of the ways in which this persona might stand at odds with other aspects of Swift's career. Thank you so much,… Continue reading Taylor Swift: The New Romantic Poet

Book news · Publications

A preview of my new book

I'm so excited to share some content from my new book, Stars Around My Scars: The Annotated Poetry of Taylor Swift, out tomorrow (28 January)! If you haven't yet ordered a copy, I'm hoping this will convince you to do so! For each of the 46 songs included in the book (you can find my… Continue reading A preview of my new book

Book news

Coming Soon: My First Taylor Swift Book!

Straight from the tortured poets department, I am absolutely ecstatic to announce something out of my Wildest Dreams: my first TAYLOR SWIFT BOOK will be published in January! It's a collection of 46 songs - from Debut to TTPD - with annotated lyrics and accompanying literary analysis, taking a super deep dive into the poetic… Continue reading Coming Soon: My First Taylor Swift Book!

reading lists

The Tortured Poets Department: a Curated Reading List, Song by Song

To cater to popular demand (two people asked me after a talk), I present to you a Taylored reading list inspired by every single song on The Tortured Poets Department, 'The Anthology'. Yes, you can find TTPD-inspired reading lists elsewhere (I like this one, from the Rogers Public Library in Arkansas), but I've tried to go beyond the obvious (Dylan Thomas) and select appropriate reading recommendations for each song, plus a general list based simply on vibes (e.g. Dark Academia), which you can find at the bottom. I'll keep this updated as I think of more recommendations, and please do add your own recs in the comments!

Essay

Is Taylor Swift a poet? Yes. Is that the wrong question to ask? Also yes

With less than 24 hours to go before perhaps the biggest release in music history - Taylor Swift's hotly-anticipated eleventh album, The Tortured Poets Department, already downloaded over 200 million times after being leaked the day before the official launch - the requests have started to roll into my inbox from journalists, all asking a variation on the same question: does this mean that Taylor Swift is, like...a poet? An actual...poet? [Click above image to read more]

teaching

English Literature (Taylor’s Version): Seminar 5

In seminar 5, we explored the relationship between Swift's music ('Soon You'll Get Better'; 'Ronan'; 'Marjorie'; 'You're Losing Me'; 'Bigger Than the Whole Sky') and elegy, a capacious term that usually connotes a song or poem about death or bereavement, the tradition for which originated in ancient Greece. We looked at three very different examples of elegies: the anonymous 'The Wanderer', from the tenth century (originally written in Old English); Thomas Gray's 'Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard' from the eighteenth century; and Christina Rossetti's 'A Dirge' (nineteenth century). Focusing on these poems, we explored the relationship between language, memory and emotion. Later, we asked what role elegy might play in twenty-first-century culture, and looked at some of the fan responses to Swift's elegies, speculating that these might help to remove some of the taboos surrounding grief, death and bereavement and enable people to articulate their emotions in a cathartic and restorative way. [Click above image for notes]