New Taylor Swift songwriting literature course coming to Texas University
The University of Texas at Austin is launching a new literature course this autumn that will allow students to study Taylor Swift's songwriting.
The new course is titled The Taylor Swift Songbook, and will use "the songwriting of pop music icon Taylor Swift to introduce literary critical reading and research methods-basic skills for work in English literature and other humanities disciplines."
Her songs will be read alongside works by Geoffrey Chaucer, Shakespeare, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats and more.
Sky News reports that the UTA site description for the course adds, "Focusing on Swift's music and the cultural contexts in which it and her career are situated, we'll consider frameworks for understanding her work, such as poetic form, style, and history among various matters and theoretical issues important to contextualisation as we practice close and in-depth reading, evaluating secondary sources, and building strong arguments."
Preliminary texts for The Taylor Swift Songbook include her Folklore and Evermore albums, as well as Red (Taylor's Version) and Lover.
The new university course is the second in 2022 to use Swift as the subject, following New York University’s Clive Davis Institute, which ran a course about Swift being a "creative music entrepreneur" and the "legacy of pop and country songwriters that have influenced Swift".
The Taylor Swift Songbook course will be available at The University of Texas at Austin this autumn.
- Neil Young performs "Pardon My Heart" for the first time in five decades
- Gwen Stefani on No Doubt's reunion at Coachella 2024: "It was as if we had never been apart"
- Charli XCX shares manifesto for Brat: "The angels are ready and waiting. This is the moment"
- Bad Bunny announces new album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos
- Hayley Williams teases solo tour for 2025
- DaBaby and NLE Choppa feature on new Ice Spice deluxe album
- Eminem on a joint album with 50 Cent: "I would never say it’s not possible"
Get the Best Fit take on the week in music direct to your inbox every Friday