{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "Taylor Swift's Semantic Overloading", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/168108143878/", "html": "<p><a href=\"/post/96493509413/\" class=\"tumblr_blog\" target=\"_blank\">kontextmaschine</a>:</p>\n\n<blockquote><p>Okay, as I\u2019ve established, I think Taylor Swift is a supergenius writer, the only one I consider my clear superior. But, I mean, have you heard those lyrics? Come <i>on</i>, right?</p>\n<p>Okay, yes the vocabulary and grammatical structure is pitched at an eighth-grade reading level; her work is pitched at an eighth-grade audience. But that\u2019s hardly to say there\u2019s no depth to her lyrics, it\u2019s just that a lot of it relies on semantic overloading, and particularly semantic overloading that specifically plays on her bridging of popular music genres. To simplify, pop-rock lyrics tend to set a <i>mood</i> while country lyrics tell a <i>story</i>, but Taylor Swift lyrics tend to craft an atmosphere in which individual lines <i>suggest</i> a story or multiple stories (which listeners can fill in, according to the specifics of their own lives or daydreams), which can in turn be taken as literal or as metaphors.<br/><br/>(A lot of her themes have traditionally been about the stock female coming-of-age, but they shouldn\u2019t be taken as coming from personal experience - which makes them even more impressive. Remember that she spent her teenage years not going to school and dating but home-studying and establishing her career because, contra Fifteen, she knew <i>exactly</i> what she was going to be. And she does venture afield of this - Never Grow Up and The Best Day are about the experience of watching your child grow, and Innocent is about a 32 year old woman looking to distance herself from the things she\u2019s done - \u201cTaylor Swift lyrics as explications of manosphere/redpill themes\u201d would be a pretty impressive series in its own right.)<br/><br/>Like, <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jYa1eI1hpDE\" target=\"_blank\">Mean</a>, from Speak Now. It\u2019s about bullies, right? That you\u2019ll escape from when you leave this one-horse town and live in a big old city?<br/><br/>Or is it about abusive parents? I mean,</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>some day I\u2019ll be<br/>big enough so you can\u2019t hit me</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Girl bullying isn\u2019t really a \u201chitting\u201d thing, plus</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>I bet you got pushed around,<br/>Somebody made you cold,<br/>But the <a href=\"https://www.google.com/search?q=generational+cycle+of+abuse\" target=\"_blank\">cycle</a> ends right now,<br/>cause you can\u2019t lead me down that road</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Or is it about critics, such as critics of pop-country star Taylor Swift?<br/><br/>Or yourself and in your insecurity, as your own biggest critic? (cf. Tied Together With a Smile and A Place In This World from the debut)<br/><br/>The answer, of course, is \u201cyes\u201d.<br/><br/>And that\u2019s not even adding in the reading where it\u2019s about her and Kanye West at the VMAs - because Swift can wield her public celebrity tabloid persona to add <i>more</i> reading and layers of valence to her songs, in part through encoded messages in her liner notes. Like, the liner notes code isn\u2019t hard to figure out - just take the letters incongruously capitalized. Because she\u2019s pitching at an eighth-grade audience. And she\u2019s pitching that audience <i>encrypted intertextuality</i>.<br/><br/>Okay, let\u2019s look at another song, <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwsSvU2oNrg\" target=\"_blank\">Long Live</a>, from Speak Now.<br/><br/>For one, it works a sequel to \u201c<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B1jYllE0T-k\" target=\"_blank\">Change</a>\u201d, from previous album Fearless, with its blended imagery of supporting a relationship partner, general teenage pressure, and literal revolution (released two months after the first Hunger Games novel came out and shifted the dominant tone of YA from Twilight-era \u201csupportive relationship\u201d to \u201cyouth insurrection\u201d).<br/><br/>It\u2019s about triumph, in a supportive relationship, over general teenage pressure (with an aside about high school relationships not being long-term things, in a much more optimistic tone than the similarly themed White Horse and Fifteen), is it metaphorizing that through the recurrent imagery of a coronation, or is it telling a literal story about being named Prom King &amp; Queen, and the answer of course is \u201cyes\u201d. And then the recurring line \u201cbring on all the pretenders\u201d.<br/><br/>\u201cPretenders\u201d, like, \u201cphonies\u201d, Holden Caulfield style.<br/><br/>\u201cPretenders\u201d, like, <i>unsuccessful claimants to a royal title</i>.</p></blockquote>"}