The Literary Taylor Swift: Songwriting and Intertextuality
By (Author) Betsy Winakur Tontiplaphol
Edited by Dr. Anastasia Klimchynskaya
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
14th November 2024
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Musicians, singers, bands and groups
Literary theory
782.421642
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Taylor Swift, arguably the most prolific and acclaimed singer-songwriter of the 21st century, has shaped her listeners collective consciousness and challenged her industrys often limiting attitudes toward genre, revision, and collaboration. Although Swift is a perennial subject in the media, cast in both a positive and a negative light, few professional scholars have considered her ever-growing body of work. The Literary Taylor Swift examines Swifts significance and timeliness through through literary analysis and theory. The ability to craft immersive narratives and to articulate, with acuity, a broad range of emotional experiences and a profound relationship with text is one of Taylor Swift's hallmarks. The Literary Taylor Swift explores Swifts engagements, intertextual and otherwise, with literature and treats her songs as literature. Literature as in stories, poems, and other textual forms to which literary-critical theories and methodologies can and should be productively applied. Swift's many self-styled characters are analyzed with and against literary figures and literature, from Swift's focus on reputation as read alongside 18th-century women writers to the crazy ex-girlfriend trope as feminist resistance and Swift's self-fashioned renaissance through folklore (2020) and evermore (2020). This collection offers carefully curated arguments constellated around four key relationships: Swift and the literary-historical canon; Swift and the language of gender and sexuality; Swift and the relationship between writing and memory; and Swift and the nature of literary craft.
Betsy Winakur Tontiplaphol is Professor of English at Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas, USA, where she specializes in 19th-century British literature, particularly Romantic poetry. In addition to numerous essays, she is the author of Poetics of Luxury in the Nineteenth Century: Keats, Tennyson, and Hopkins (2011) and The Pointe of the Pen: Nineteenth-Century Poetry and the Balletic Imagination (2021). Anastasia Klimchynskaya is an instructor in the School of Communication at Loyola University Chicago, Illinois, USA. She specializes in 19th-century literature in its intersections with science, technology, and the cultural imagination. She is author of a forthcoming volume on the emergence of science fiction as a reflection of humanity's recalibrated relationship to the natural world. Her work has appeared in Configurations, the SFRA Review, Social Anthropology, and SF Film and Television.