Dubai Telegraph - Belgium students' love story with Taylor Swift

EUR -
AED 3.985715
AFN 77.64216
ALL 99.154125
AMD 424.461267
ANG 1.942616
AOA 995.068129
ARS 1163.928944
AUD 1.724351
AWG 1.955954
AZN 1.846307
BAM 1.965416
BBD 2.190316
BDT 131.824976
BGN 1.955951
BHD 0.408994
BIF 3175.102681
BMD 1.085134
BND 1.457732
BOB 7.495674
BRL 6.147393
BSD 1.084808
BTN 92.723666
BWP 15.014461
BYN 3.550069
BYR 21268.630398
BZD 2.178961
CAD 1.543256
CDF 3115.420287
CHF 0.956969
CLF 0.027029
CLP 1037.214553
CNY 7.88686
CNH 7.920302
COP 4500.322827
CRC 544.966341
CUC 1.085134
CUP 28.756056
CVE 110.73861
CZK 24.941816
DJF 192.849609
DKK 7.460409
DOP 68.716145
DZD 145.096525
EGP 54.865505
ERN 16.277013
ETB 140.904686
FJD 2.526029
FKP 0.839715
GBP 0.834522
GEL 2.994756
GGP 0.839715
GHS 16.830408
GIP 0.839715
GMD 77.595906
GNF 9391.836346
GTQ 8.368946
GYD 227.633737
HKD 8.445328
HNL 27.947653
HRK 7.534305
HTG 142.165569
HUF 400.447126
IDR 18171.49461
ILS 4.015311
IMP 0.839715
INR 92.993069
IQD 1421.525807
IRR 45697.712735
ISK 143.856328
JEP 0.839715
JMD 171.298105
JOD 0.769393
JPY 161.852132
KES 140.521208
KGS 94.15764
KHR 4297.131749
KMF 492.106359
KPW 976.642287
KRW 1591.42555
KWD 0.334492
KYD 0.904023
KZT 545.94111
LAK 23509.432539
LBP 97228.025029
LKR 321.040747
LRD 216.863936
LSL 20.053568
LTL 3.204119
LVL 0.656387
LYD 5.241032
MAD 10.402633
MDL 19.455188
MGA 5062.150872
MKD 61.534104
MMK 2278.250121
MNT 3777.768706
MOP 8.69665
MRU 43.243187
MUR 49.644398
MVR 16.721857
MWK 1883.793304
MXN 21.897799
MYR 4.833196
MZN 69.343747
NAD 20.053506
NGN 1668.089525
NIO 39.878866
NOK 11.28755
NPR 148.357866
NZD 1.892094
OMR 0.417734
PAB 1.084808
PEN 3.990076
PGK 4.382318
PHP 62.042572
PKR 304.051877
PLN 4.172194
PYG 8684.490349
QAR 3.950702
RON 4.977292
RSD 117.19126
RUB 91.418045
RWF 1535.464899
SAR 4.069768
SBD 9.035657
SCR 15.584646
SDG 651.614402
SEK 10.744888
SGD 1.459501
SHP 0.852745
SLE 24.773301
SLL 22754.722865
SOS 620.140982
SRD 39.715368
STD 22460.087145
SVC 9.491438
SYP 14109.423508
SZL 20.052766
THB 37.187328
TJS 11.840331
TMT 3.808821
TND 3.361202
TOP 2.541492
TRY 41.175356
TTD 7.36001
TWD 36.048921
TZS 2864.708694
UAH 44.861191
UGX 3956.357151
USD 1.085134
UYU 45.713662
UZS 14036.211517
VES 75.879756
VND 27811.989648
VUV 133.879093
WST 3.078602
XAF 659.182161
XAG 0.032006
XAU 0.000346
XCD 2.932629
XDR 0.819796
XOF 658.131839
XPF 119.331742
YER 266.563367
ZAR 20.516846
ZMK 9767.519856
ZMW 30.237944
ZWL 349.412771
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    68

    0%

  • NGG

    0.0000

    65.78

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.83

    +0.04%

  • BCE

    -0.9600

    21.82

    -4.4%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2700

    9.78

    -2.76%

  • SCS

    0.1400

    11.46

    +1.22%

  • BCC

    3.1600

    102.07

    +3.1%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.04

    +0.46%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    50.98

    +0.61%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    22.5

    +0.27%

  • RIO

    -0.3300

    59.9

    -0.55%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    9.12

    -1.64%

  • GSK

    -0.2300

    37.64

    -0.61%

  • AZN

    -0.3800

    72.22

    -0.53%

  • BP

    0.0000

    33.81

    0%

  • BTI

    -0.8500

    40.25

    -2.11%

Belgium students' love story with Taylor Swift
Belgium students' love story with Taylor Swift / Photo: ANGELA WEISS - AFP/File

Belgium students' love story with Taylor Swift

A hubbub grips the class in the Belgian city of Ghent as university students eagerly discuss whether US pop star Taylor Swift is a "literary genius".

Text size:

The question elicits passionate responses from students, and it's an exercise their professor hopes will enliven their engagement with more traditional figures of the English Literature canon.

The course is among a handful that have popped up at universities around the world as pop titan Swift has racked up hits and awards and as her Eras Tour is expected to set a record for the first billion-dollar tour.

"To read her lyrics without the context of the song, it can feel like poetry," one student says, after the teacher opens the floor to discussion.

Another student pipes up to suggest it's too soon to say Swift, 33, has had the same cultural impact as William Shakespeare, known around the world for many centuries. While Shakespeare wrote at least 38 plays, Swift has recorded 10 albums.

Some will wonder what Shakespeare and his peers share in common with today's biggest US singer-songwriter.

Well, they are all the subject of Elly McCausland's course called "Literature (Taylor's Version)" for Master's degree students at Ghent University, which will run until the end of the year.

During the first class on Monday, assistant professor McCausland piqued the students' curiosity with controversial questions, including why certain authors and literature are considered timeless, while other books are not valued the same way.

McCausland's goal? To make literature more accessible.

"I'd like to get people excited about literature, thinking about literature in a new way and realising that actually even literature from centuries and centuries ago still has something to add to our conversations," she told AFP at the class.

- 'Swift is a real poet' -

The 10-session course will use Swift's songs as references for themes and will focus on a series of historic texts including Charlotte Bronte's Villette, lesser known than Jane Eyre.

The course has proved popular, with 61 students signed up, twice as many as usual.

There are even students from other parts of Belgium.

Zina Ringoot, 20, had learned just hours before that she could attend the course and made the 90-minute trip to Ghent from Antwerp in the northeast.

"I'm a huge Taylor Swift fan," said Ringoot, an English literature Master's student.

"I'm hoping to write my thesis on Taylor Swift's album 'folklore' and how it connects to romanticism. So I thought I would get a lot out of this class."

Not everyone in the class is a Swiftie, as her fans call themselves.

Joris Verschelde, 21, admitted he was "not that big of a fan" but wanted to "see the connection between the songs and what what we already learned" in the older texts.

Laughter often fills the windowless auditorium, despite the fact that serious themes are on the agenda, including feminism, sexism and misogyny.

When McCausland asks: "Who are the gatekeepers" of English literature, one student quips: "A bunch of old men!"

Even if critics reject comparisons with the canonical greats, Swift has fans even among Shakespeare experts including British academic Sir Jonathan Bate.

After attending a concert during Swift's record-breaking Eras tour, Bate wrote in the Sunday Times in April: "I came away with confirmation of a thought I first had 15 years ago: this isn't just high-class showbiz, Taylor Swift is a real poet."

- Beyond Belgium -

University courses looking at Swift have been popping up around the world.

New York University's Clive Davis Institute launched its first-ever course on Swift last year, and Queen Mary University of London offered a summer school this year looking at Swift through a literary lens.

In Arizona, PhD student Alexandra Wormley is hosting a course on the social psychology of Swift at Arizona State University this autumn.

Critics online and even some media pundits have pondered just what it is about Swift that is so appealing.

For Clio Doyle, an academic who hosted the summer course at Queen Mary, "Swift is a really fascinating songwriter".

The lecturer in early modern literature added that another reason she looked at Swift was because of her popularity and the discussions surrounding her work.

"A course about Swift would be an opportunity for students both to deepen their readings of Swift's lyrics and to think about what it means to study something as literature," Doyle, who runs a similarly-themed podcast about Swift, told AFP.

The summer course will be offered again next year, and interest is not limited to the United States or Europe.

The University of Melbourne will host a three-day "Swiftposium" looking at Swift's cultural, economic and global impact in February 2024, the same month her tour arrives in Australia.

Y.El-Kaaby--DT