Harvard Dives into Taylor's Deep End

Harvard’s Taylor Swift Scholars Have Thoughts on ‘Tortured Poets’

The students taking Harvard University’s class on the singer are studying up. Their final papers are due at the end of the month.

By Madison Malone Kircher

April 19, 2024

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On Thursday night, about 50 students from the Harvard class gathered to await the midnight release of Taylor Swift’s new album.


Fans of Taylor Swift often study up for a new album, revisiting the singer’s older works to prepare to analyze lyrics and song titles for secret messages and meanings.

“The Tortured Poets Department” is getting much the same treatment, and perhaps no group of listeners was better prepared than the students at Harvard University currently studying Ms. Swift’s works in an English class devoted entirely to the artist. The undergraduate course, “Taylor Swift and Her World,” is taught by Stephanie Burt, who has her students comparing Ms. Swift’s songs to works by poets and writers including Willa Cather, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth.

On Thursday night, about 50 students from the class gathered in a lecture hall on campus to listen to Ms. Swift’s new album. Mary Pankowski, a 22-year-old senior studying history of art and architecture, wore a cream sweatshirt she bought at Ms. Swift’s Eras tour last year. The group made beaded friendship bracelets to celebrate the new album, she said.

When the clock struck midnight, the classroom erupted into applause, and the analysis began. First, the group listened through the album once without discussing, just taking it all in.

Certain lines, however, immediately caused a stir, said Samantha Wilhoit, a junior studying government — like a reference to the singer Charlie Puth and the s~cathing lyrics to the song “The Smallest Man Who Ever Lived,” Ms. Wilhoit, 21, said.

A line from the song “I Can Do It With a Broken Heart,” in which Ms. Swift sings, “I cry a lot but I am so productive,” also seemed to resonate, Ms. Wilhoit said, laughing.

A smaller group of students, including Ms. Pankowski, stuck it out until the early hours of the morning waiting to see if Ms. Swift would drop additional music. At 2 a.m., they were rewarded with an additional “volume” of 15 tracks called “The Anthology.” Ms. Pankowski said she didn’t go to sleep until hours later.

Speaking with The New York Times together on a video call Friday morning, several students from the class discussed their thoughts on the 31 new songs and brainstormed their final papers, which are due at the end of the month.

____________________________________________________________________

When the clock struck midnight,
the classroom erupted into applause,
and the analysis began.

____________________________________________________________________


“The song ‘Clara Bow’ reminded me of ‘The Song of the Lark,’” Makenna Walko, 19, said, citing the Willa Cather novel that follows the career of an aspiring opera singer, Thea Kronborg. “She’s talking about a girl trying to make it out of her small town and trying to get to Manhattan, and what it’s like to have these big, musical dreams and try to pursue them,” she continued. “That’s a narrative that has shown up a lot in Taylor’s own life, over the course of her own career. In a lot of ways, it’s Taylor’s story, too.”

Lola DeAscentiis, a sophomore, zeroed in on the song “But Daddy I Love Him,” comparing it to the Sylvia Plath poem “Daddy.” She plans to explore the link in her final paper.

“I hesitate to say that the song was anywhere near the genius of Sylvia Plath — no offense to Taylor Swift — but I can definitely see some similarities in the themes, like sadness, depression and mental health,” Ms. DeAscentiis, 20, said. (Ms. DeAscentiis also drew a distinction between being a fan of Ms. Swift and being a devoted Swiftie. She said she identified as the former.)

“The way that Taylor overlays her relationship with the significant other that she’s talking about in the song with the relationship that she has with her father — I think that was very Plath,” she added.


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Gleaned from the album's extensive foot-notes, Harvard's female "Midnight Oilers" even donned the very same sexy 'creamsicle' socks and spiky black stiletto heels preferred by past 'tortured poets,' Evelyn Waugh and Joyce Kilmer, worn religiously by them while writing and partying madly into the wee hours.


Another student, Ana Paulina Serrano, echoed Ms. DeAscentiis, noting that the class had learned about the genre of confessional poetry. “Is Taylor considered a confessional poet?” Ms. Serrano, a 21-year-old junior majoring in neuroscience, asked the group on the call. In support of her own position, she offered as evidence Ms. Swift’s song “Mastermind,” a track off “Midnights,” in which Ms. Swift reveals herself to have calculated and plotted the outcome of a relationship.

“Sometimes she’s confessing things that we, like, already knew or assumed, but she often seems to feel this need to explicitly tell us,” Ms. Serrano added.

Of particular interest to the rapt and unsettled class was the video of the night a young, inexperienced and barely recognizable Ms. Swift, working one-on-one with her background singer, Tallulah Banks, taught her to keep her mouth open for nearly twelve hours without saying a single word. "Tallulah taught me about finding the passion buried deep within me," Taylor confessed, "and how to utilize it in my music and my life, a marathon emotional lesson I carry with me to this day."
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Isabel Levin, a 23-year-old senior studying integrative biology, said she thought Ms. Swift’s delivery on several tracks had a spoken-word quality. She wondered if maybe some of the lyrics had initially begun not as songs but as more traditional poems.

Ms. Swift has said she categorizes her songs by the type of pen she imagines using to write each. A “frivolous, carefree, bouncy” song is a glitter gel pen song, while a fountain pen song might be more “brutally honest,” according to Ms. Swift. Quill pen songs are “all old-fashioned, like you’re a 19th-century poet crafting your next sonnet by candlelight,” she explained during her acceptance speech as songwriter-artist of the decade at the Nashville Songwriter Awards in 2022.

And with what implement might Ms. Swift have written “Tortured Poets?”

Quill pen, for sure, Ms. Walko said.
________


Olla's 'wardrobe suggestion' for Nicky to wear to the big U.K. Taylor Swift concert in June.
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Published by Olive8
1 year ago
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DrWhoWhatandWhere
DrWhoWhatandWhere 12 months ago
Pretty sneaky dropping those gifs...
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DrWhoWhatandWhere
DrWhoWhatandWhere 12 months ago
I wonder if Nicky has a butt tat like that...
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oldjacker67
oldjacker67 1 year ago
to Olive8 : I couldn't agree more
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Olive8
Olive8 Publisher 1 year ago
to oldjacker67 : Tough to top Taylor in that venue. Would, however, definitely afford Nicky the crystal-clear opportunity of displaying to 70,000 'other' Swifties just exactly *what she's made of*: 100% pure, raging, sumptuous, succulent, Grade-A estrogen on high heels.
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oldjacker67
oldjacker67 1 year ago
to Olive8 : Great taste with the outfit. Not sure if Nicky wouldn't be the star of the show!!
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Nickyhere
Nickyhere 1 year ago
to Olive8 : Wow! I see what you mean. I can see the waves of girls (and everyone) parting to stare me through. I could go anywhere I want. NO ONE would dare deny me. If Taylor saw me….fuck! I’m so in.
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Olive8
Olive8 Publisher 1 year ago
to Nickyhere : I've made a little suggestion of a cute little outfit I think you should wear to your fast approaching concert event. Talk about being "one body with everyone!"  I predict that, in *that* get-up, you'll be the SECOND most popular woman in the stadium! And, mark my words, my 'modest proposal' may even get you an offer for another highly coveted seat...on Ms. Swift's own private jet!  :D  And the outfit's even *all-weatherproof!*. ; P

I put the link up in the bottom of the article's text box, above. You'll be *the toast of Swiftie-town!* LOL!  : P
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oldjacker67
oldjacker67 1 year ago
to SeaStories1983 : It is wonderful and fun to see the joy she brings to our friends here. I just grew up in a way different era as did you. Reminds me of all the hoopla around the Beatles growing up.
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Nickyhere
Nickyhere 1 year ago
to Olive8 : She's Happiness to me.  Everything she does. She's Good. Not, Bad.
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Nickyhere
Nickyhere 1 year ago
to Olive8 : I've tried not to look, because I need to survive until the Evening. I believe it's set back, as you say, facing directly towards the stage. I can really savour everything from there, instead of being in the real mix.  Where I'd love to be, also, and where I could be one body with everyone.
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SeaStories1983
SeaStories1983 1 year ago
to oldjacker67 : I'll ride on your coattails here, good sir. I agree with you on the notion that while I may not be a fan per se of La Swift, I appreciate her talent both artistically and business wise, and I think a genuine compassion shining through that is bringing such joy to our dear friends here. And as you say, not fucking anyone over. Enjoy the ride, darlings!
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Olive8
Olive8 Publisher 1 year ago
to Nickyhere : Your excitement and enthusiasm are refreshingly positive and actually kind of contagious. lol!  : ))P
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Olive8
Olive8 Publisher 1 year ago
to Nickyhere : Do you know where your seat in the stadium is? Some have said that being somewhat up above the stage is good for seeing the whole production unfolding below while still following the intimate closeups on the huge screens. I'm psyched for you, truly. It's going to be an otherworldly, quasi-religious, out-of-body experience to be in the midst of such an immediate, transformative event. You'll be walking on air.
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oldjacker67
oldjacker67 1 year ago
to Nickyhere : Thank you and I remember your page. It was a work of art. Happy you like mine.
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Nickyhere
Nickyhere 1 year ago
to oldjacker67 : She does her own thing, as I see it. Others cause the issues and problems. People like her. She’s good, and she’s one of us.
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Nickyhere
Nickyhere 1 year ago
to oldjacker67 : Awww, that’s so kind of you. It’s easy with good guys like you around. I love your page, by the way. I used to have mine decorated like that too. But….. :frowning:
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oldjacker67
oldjacker67 1 year ago
to Nickyhere : Hahahahaha. Let's hope you do recover. You make the world abetter place.
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oldjacker67
oldjacker67 1 year ago
Poets and song writers, aren't they basically the same. Tell me Bob Dylan or John Lennon, to name two, weren't poets. Does Taylor get inspiration from others, don't we all. Is she as good a poet as those she was compared to? Who's to say. Depends on what you like I suppose. One thing for sure is Taylor Swift had captured the attention of the world. Am I a Swifty? No. Do I appreciate her talent? Yes. That people are studying her as a business model, why not. She has amassed a fortune seemingly without fucking anyone over. Without lying, cheating or stealing her way to success. How refreshing. 
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Nickyhere
Nickyhere 1 year ago
Thank you Olla. Once again 🙏
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Nickyhere
Nickyhere 1 year ago
I love what happened at midnight on the Thursday night. Such excitement there! For me, she’s like a mountain to climb. An ocean to embrace. A miracle to savour. She’s another wonder of the world. Someone and something too big to appreciate. But, songs to make you laugh and cry. And mostly, jump for joy. She’ll be a matter of metres from me in June. Not sure if I’ll ever recover.
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DrWhoWhatandWhere
I think it is amazing that they are teaching "Swiftonomics" at many Universities. Her Eras tour has had a profound affect on local economies...providing jobs and important sales. And it des not stop here...the Swift affect has been felt globally. Just think of all those Uber rides to the concerts
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