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The Folklore Elements of My Tears Ricochet24 Jul 202500:52:05

In the debut episode of The Swiftie and The Scholar, Angela McDow, the Swiftie, and her uncle Dr. Jerry Coats, the Scholar, dig into My Tears Ricochet, the fifth track from Taylor Swift's Folklore album.

They discuss the different folklore elements that Taylor uses in the song, the prevailing fan theory on the song's inspiration, and Uncle Jerry watches his first Eras Tour performance.


Works Cited:

The White Lady in Folklore

Morphology of the Folktale – V. Propp – Affiliate Link

Motif-Index of Folk-Literature; Volume 6.1 Index (A-K) – Stith Thompson – Aff Link

Motif-Index of Folk-Literature; Volume 6.1 Index (L-Z) - Stith Thompson – Aff Link

From the Beast to The Blonde – Marina Wariner

The Uses of Enchantment – Bruno Bettelheim – Aff Link

Yvonne Jocks - Goodreads


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The Monstrous Femininity of Who's Afraid of Little Old Me?31 Jul 202501:09:09

Uncle Jerry and Angela tackle Taylor Swift’s ‘Who’s Afraid of Little Old Me?’ in the second episode of The Swiftie and The Scholar. Uncle Jerry talks about his journey from hate to appreciation of this track, he introduces the concept of Monstrous Femininity, and they talk about the cultural image of the witch throughout history. 

Angela gives a (not so) brief look into her role as a Swiftie, and they watch and discuss both the lyric video and the Eras Tour performance of this TTPD track.

Works Cited:

Allen Ginsberg – Howl

Thomas Chatterton

Chatterton – Painting by Henry Wallis

Dylan Thomas – Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night

Bohemian Coffee

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.

Snoweylily – Who’s Afraid of Little Old Me?

To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee – Affiliate Link

The Monstrous-Feminine – Barbara Creed – Affiliate Link

Who’s Afraid of Little Old Me? – Official Lyric Video

WAOLOM Performance – Eras Tour – 5/9/2024

Sounds Like a Cult – The Cult of Taylor Swift

The Faith Crisis of Would've Could've Should've07 Aug 202501:11:23

In this episode of The Swiftie and The Scholar, Uncle Jerry and Angela dissect Would’ve Could’ve Should’ve from Taylor Swift’s 2022 album Midnights. They briefly discuss their own church connections, explore the various religious imagery and references used throughout the song, and come to understand that they relate to the song in similar but different ways. 

Uncle Jerry grades the song and brings in some poetry by Elizabeth Barrett Browning to round out his thoughts on the sadness of the track.

Works Cited:

Rhetorical Theory and Practice

Immortal Technique – Dance with the Devil

Love Story (1970 film)

Sonnets from the Portuguese – Elizabeth Barrett Browning – Affiliate Link

Les Miserables – Victor Hugo, Christine Donogher – Aff Link

The Legend of Rose Latulipe






The Dramatic Monologue of Cowboy Like Me14 Aug 202501:04:15

In this episode of The Swiftie and The Scholar, Angela asks Uncle Jerry about his favorite music before they dive into cowboy like me from Taylor Swift’s 2020 album evermore.

Uncle Jerry teaches us about the dramatic monologue and how Taylor uses this device in the song. They also talk about the use of cliches, indeterminate endings, and they discuss whether they think the couple in the song ends up together or not. 


Works Cited:

Blondie 

Stardust — Hoagy Carmichael 

Georgia on my Mind — Hoagy Carmichael

Cantigas de Santa Maria

Cantiga 

Medieval Babes

Pomplamoose

Pokey LaFarge

Gilbert and Sullivan

La Boheme

Tosca 

Yeoman of the Guard

Pirates of Penzance 

HMS Pinafore

In Medias Res

The Odyssey – Homer

Dramatic Monologue

My Last Duchess – Robert Browning

Porphyria's Lover – Robert Browning

The Most Dangerous Game – Richard Connell

BONUS: Ramblings on The Life of A Showgirl17 Aug 202500:28:35

In this bonus episode, Uncle Jerry and Angela discuss the excitement of the last week, including the cryptic Taylor Nation and New Heights posts, the countdowns, the new album announcement, and the two hour podcast episode heard 'round the world.

Uncle Jerry teaches us a little bit about Ophelia and Hamlet to give some context around the album's opening track title, The Fate of Ophelia, and they discuss how Uncle Jerry got just a lilllll excited about the news.

The Indirect Characterization of Death By A Thousand Cuts21 Aug 202500:44:28

In this episode of The Swiftie and The Scholar, Uncle Jerry and Angela analyze Death By A Thousand Cuts from Taylor Swift's 2019 album, Lover.

Uncle Jerry finds literary devices aplenty in the lyrics, and discusses how she uses those devices to deftly handle the storytelling in the poem via indirect characterization.

They also discuss the roundabout inspiration of this song and the Swiftie tradition of friendship bracelets.


Works Cited:

A Midsummer Night’s Dream – Shakespeare – Affiliate Link

Lingchi

Death By A Thousand Cuts – Timothy Brook, Jérôme Bourgon, Gregory Blue – Aff Link

Mandarin Squares

Great Expectations — Charles Dickens – Aff Link

Kyn You Believe It — IDK Traffic Light

Anaphora 

Indirect Characterization


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The Self-Reflection of Getaway Car11 Sep 202500:47:46

Today we’re putting the money in the bag and stealing the keys, and discussing Taylor Swift’s Getaway Car from 2017. This cult Swiftie fave is our first track from Reputation, and Angela chose it because she knew Uncle Jerry would love the Dickens reference in the first line.

Watch as the duo dissects each line, and Uncle Jerry picks up on the self-reflection Taylor wrote into the song.

Works Cited:

A Tale of Two Cities – Charles Dickens – Affiliate Link

Shades of Gray – Carolyn Reeder – Aff Link

Nicholas Nickleby – Charles Dickens – Aff Link

Lexical Ambiguity

Getaway Car Shirt – Girl Tribe Co.

Writing BTS with Jack


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The Complex Poetics of So Long, London04 Sep 202501:04:06

Let's talk through So Long, London!

In this episode of The Swiftie and The Scholar, Uncle Jerry and Angela dissect the poetic lyrics of the fifth track from Taylor Swift's 2024 album, The Tortured Poets Department.

They find tons of literary devices and references, and Uncle Jerry even makes another correct prediction on the song's intro.

Stay until the end to hear Uncle Jerry's grade for the song as a whole.

Works Cited:

Life of Johnson – James Boswell – Affiliate Link

Perrine’s Sound and Sense: An Introduction to Poetry – Aff Link

The Bells — Edgar Allan Poe

Ignis fatuus

Will-o’-the-wisp – Irish Folklore

Odd Man Out – 1947 film

The Bluest Eye – Toni Morrison – Aff Link

Lyric Video

Eras Tour Performance


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The Diction Study of Cold As You28 Aug 202500:47:35

In this episode of The Swiftie and The Scholar, Angela and Uncle Jerry are taking it waaayyy back to 2006 with Taylor Swift’s first ever track 5, Cold As You. It might seem like a weird choice, but Angela wanted to present Uncle Jerry with some of Taylor’s earliest work so he could gain context around her growth as an artist over her entire career. 

Uncle Jerry finds a few redeeming qualities in the song, and together they explore other break-up poetry from the greats. 

Works Cited:

Percy Bysshe Shelley

Modern Love: I – George Meredith Sonnet

It’s Not You, It’s Me – Jerry Williams – Affiliate Link

The Research Society for Victorian Periodicals

Rosemary VanArsdel Prize

Her Kind – Ann Sexton

Heavy – Mary Oliver

A Broken Appointment – Thomas Hardy 

The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson – Aff Link

Heart! We will forget him! – Emily Dickinson

I held a Jewel in my fingers – Emily Dickinson

Eras Tour Surprise Song — Houston


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The Rhythmic Power of Champagne Problems18 Sep 202500:46:19

Dom Perignon, did you bring it? 

Today we’re toasting to Champagne Problems from Taylor Swift’s 2020 album, evermore. Uncle Jerry discusses the different meter used throughout the lyrics, and also wonders if there’s a deeper meaning with society’s expectations and the narrator’s autonomy throughout the story.

Angela brings up the Swiftie discussion about which word they’ll never say again, and they also tell the story of Uncle Jerry officiating Angela’s wedding.


Works Cited:

Night Train – Jimmy Forrest

Take the A Train – Duke Ellington

In Medias Res

Heart of Glass – Blondie

Iambic Pentameter

Trochee

Dactyl

Anapest Disnarration and the Unmentioned in Fact and Fiction – Marina Lambrou – Affiliate Link

Sociological Criticism


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The Many Literary Themes of All Too Well25 Sep 202501:50:57

Come walk through the door with us, cause the air is getting cooooold. Our 10th episode is here, and we were hoping you had 10 minutes to spare for this one. 


We are digging deep into the All Too Well universe, and Uncle Jerry compares both the original version and the 10 minute version, what he thinks about the lyrics that were redacted for the edited version, and Taylor Swift’s masterful use of metaphor and other literary devices in every line of this song. 


Works Cited:

The Prelude – William Wordsworth – Affiliate Link

Orality and Literacy – Walter J. Ong – Aff Link

Birches – Robert Frost

Mending Wall – Robert Frost

Metaphors We Live By – George Lakoff and Mark Johnson – Aff Link

In Just – Spring – e.e. Cummings

Poetry – Nikki Giovanni

Let me not to the marriage of true minds (Sonnet 116) – William Shakespeare

A Rose for Emily – William Faulkner


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Answering Your Questions - Volume 102 Oct 202500:57:53

In this episode, Uncle Jerry and Angela get caught up on the latest Swiftie news, including the engagement and The Release Party of a Showgirl, and then they get into answering your questions from Instagram and TikTok. We cover poetry curriculum, how to get into scholarly pursuits, how Angela convinced Uncle Jerry to do the podcast, and how we select which songs we cover.


There are links below to (most of!) the recommended literature from the episode. Some links are affiliate links, which means if you click and purchase, we will make a small commission at no cost to you.


Works Cited:

i carry your heart with me – e.e. cummings

Epithalamion – Edmund Spenser

The Hornblower Series – C.S. Forester

Mr. Midshipman Hornblower (Book 1) – C.S. Forester

African Queen – C.S. Forester

The Good Shepherd – C.S. Forester

2001: A Space Odyssey – Arthur C. Clarke

Stranger in a Strange Land Paperback – Robert A. Heinlein

The Little Prince – Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

The Oxford Book of Modern Verse – W.B. Yeats

The Oxford Book of English Verse – Christopher Ricks

The Norton Anthology of American Literature – Robert S. Levine

E. E. Cummings: Complete Poems, 1904–1962

The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens: The Corrected Edition

Leaves of Grass – Walt Whitman

Metaphors We Live By – George Lakoff and Mark Johnson

Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair – Pablo Neruda

The Poet and His Book: The Collected Poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay

The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson

The Complete Poems: Anne Sexton

The Penguin Anthology of Twentieth-Century American Poetry Paperback – Rita Dove

American Poetry: The Twentieth Century, Volume 1: Henry Adams to Dorothy Parker – Robert Hass

The Oxford Book of American Short Stories – Joyce Carol Oates

A Cool Million Paperback – Nathanael West

Lucky Jim Paperback – Kingsley Amis

Cold Comfort Farm Paperback – Stella Gibbons 

Bleak House – Charles Dickens

The Old Curiosity Shop – Charles Dickens

Nicholas Nickleby – Charles Dickens 

Our Mutual Friend – Charles Dickens




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BONUS: The Release Party of A Showgirl Recap07 Oct 202500:27:52

The Swiftie and The Scholar took a field trip to the movie theater this weekend to hang out with Taylor and the Swifties! This was Uncle Jerry's first in-person swiftie experience, and he gives us his thoughts, along with his first impressions of a few of the new tracks.

Angela gives her first impressions on the album and discusses which songs the podcast will cover first.

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The Growth and Healing of Clean09 Oct 202500:47:41

We’re coming down from our Showgirl high, and taking it back to 1989 this week. Uncle Jerry takes us through Clean, and breaks down the metaphors and themes found in the poem, including addiction, healing, personal growth, and personal agency.


He also asks Angela who this song was inspired by, and admits that he’s now wondering about that in all of these songs. :) 


There are links below to (most of!) the recommended literature from the episode. Some links are affiliate links, which means if you click and purchase, we will make a small commission at no cost to you.


Works Cited:

Metaphors We Live By –  George Lakoff and Mark Johnson

The Great War and Modern Memory – Paul Fussell

Not Waving but Drowning – Stevie Smith

Afterwards – Sara Teasdale

After Love – Sara Teasdale


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The Sensory Imagery of Maroon16 Oct 202500:53:12

We are wiping the incense dust off the shelf and picking ourselves up off the floor with Maroon this week. This Midnights track from 2022 is full of imagery, senses, colors, and so much more. Uncle Jerry also surprises us all with an interpretation from left field, which allows Angela the space to explain a specific sect of swifties.


Enjoy!


Works Cited:

Richard Wright – Black American novelist

Parallelism in Literature

Robert Frost – The Road Not Taken

Robert Frost – Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening

Lawrence Ferlinghetti – American Beat poet

Gregory Corso – American Beat poet

Jack Kerouac – American Beat poet

On The Road – Jack Kerouac


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The Cinematic Imagery of Father Figure30 Oct 202501:05:34

Step into our office and leave it with us. We protect the family! Join us as we walk through Father Figure from The Life of a Showgirl. Uncle Jerry gives his theories on the inspiration for the song, including many different movies, and Angela works out where she thinks the narrator changes mid-track.

Pour yourself some brown liquor and you won’t be sleeping with the fishes.


Works Cited:

A Star is Born – All Versions Ranked

All About Eve (1950)

Goodfellas (1990)

The Godfather (1972)

The Freshman (1990)

Ragged Dick: The 1868 Classic Rags to Riches Tale – Horatio Alger – Affiliate Link


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The Reinterpretation of The Fate of Ophelia23 Oct 202501:19:25

We have officially entered our Showgirl era, and we’re kicking it off with The Fate of Ophelia. Uncle Jerry teaches us all about Ophelia’s role in Hamlet, one of the Ophelia paintings Taylor may have drawn inspiration from, and a couple of feminist critics’ takes on Ophelia. 


We then get into the song, Angela weaves in a few nuggets of Tay-lore, and they round it out by discussing the feminist issues with the track,  watching the music video and listening to the voice memo of the writing of the song. 


Works Cited:

Hamlet – William Shakespeare – Affiliate Link

What are Foil Characters?

Representing Ophelia: Women, Madness, and the Responsibilities of Feminist Criticism  – Elaine Showalter

Hearing Ophelia: Gender and Tragic Discourse in "Hamlet" – Sandra K. Fischer

Desolation Row – Bob Dylan

The Story of Ophelia – The Tate

Pre-Raphaelite Women – Jan Marsh

Dante Gabriel Rossetti – Ash Russell

The Essential Pre-Raphaelites – Lucinda Hawksley – Aff Link

The Language of Flowers – Margaret Pickston – Aff Link

The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady – Edith Holden – Aff Link

The King’s Two Bodies – Ernst Kantorowicz – Aff Link


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The Traditional Tropes of Love Story06 Nov 202500:54:57

We’re taking it back to high school this week and exploring the country phenomenon that is Love Story. This is our first track from Fearless (2008), and Uncle Jerry explores all of the themes and tropes that are missing from the poem when compared to her current work, like complex metaphors and twisted idioms.


Works Cited:

Romeo and Juliet – William Shakespeare – Affiliate Link

Catullus – Roman Poet

Let Us Live and Love (5) – Catullus

The Scarlet Letter – Nathaniel Hawthorne – Aff Link

Easy A (2010)

Doctor Zhivago – Boris Pasternak – Aff Link

Deconstructionism


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The Loss of Youth and Innocence in Peter 13 Nov 202500:57:10

Well friends, I think we did it. Stay all the way to the end for a big surprise out of Uncle Jerry.


In this episode, we're covering one of Angela's favorite TTPD tracks, Peter. Uncle Jerry finds layer after layer in the poem, and decides that this is a beautiful, melancholic reflection on the loss of innocence and youth, told through the lens of Peter Pan.


Works Cited:

Peter Pan - the Original 1911 Classic – J.M. Barrie – Aff Link

Illustrated Peter Pan: Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens – J.M. Barrie – Aff Link

The Dead Poets Society (1989)

I'm sorry for the Dead—Today – Emily Dickinson 

This Is Just To Say – William Carlos Williams

In Just – Spring – e.e. cummings 

Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening – Robert Frost

Love's Labor's Lost – William Shakespeare 

Lyric Video

Peter Surprise Song


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The Gothic Tradition of The Black Dog20 Nov 202501:11:07
The Fairytale Diction of Enchanted 27 Nov 202500:52:58

We are finally covering a song from Speak Now! I’m so sorry to all the Speak Now stans that it took this long, but we got here. Uncle Jerry takes us through Taylor’s word choice throughout Enchanted, and how it reveals the specific fairy tale inspiration behind the song. Angela explains the lore of this being Taylor’s only completely self-written album and the moment that inspired the song. 


Works Cited:

Trochee / Trochaic Meter

Smiling Faces Sometimes – The Undisputed Truth

We Wear the Mask – Paul Laurence Dunbar

Caesura

Mending Wall – Robert Frost

Indirect Discourse

Metonymy

Some Enchanted Evening – South Pacific


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The Romanticism of The Lakes04 Dec 202500:59:59
The 80s Club Vibes of New Romantics11 Dec 202500:55:16

After all the talk about Romanticism in the last episode, we’re taking it to the New Romantics this week. Uncle Jerry teaches us all about the sociocultural movement of the late 1970s and 1980s called New Romanticism, featuring The Blitz Kids, the London club scene, and all the fun and freedom of the era.


Works Cited:

Neoclassicism vs. Romanticism

David Bowie

Boy George

Annie Lennox

The Blitz Kids

Sweet Dreams: The Story of the New Romantics – Dylan Jones – Aff Link

Spandau Ballet

Steve Strange

Best of New Romantics – Spotify Playlist

Road to Ruin – The Ramones

Heartbreak Is the National Anthem – Rob Sheffield – Aff Link

Adam Ant

Taylor Swift’s Manuscripts – Natali Barbani


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The Double Entendre of LOML18 Dec 202500:57:04

This is one of our most requested episodes, and here it is, just in time for the holidays! Uncle Jerry picked up on something that Angela had never noticed in the poem, and they get into a bit of the Tay-lore about what inspired The Tortured Poets Department. 


Works Cited:

e.e. cummings

The Fates of Greek Mythology

Just Kids – Patti Smith – Aff Link

Breaking Up Is Hard to Do – Neil Sedaka

Water Lilies – Claude Monet

T.S. Eliot

Misery (1990)

Synecdoche

Epistrophe


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The Intertextuality of ‘Tis the Damn Season24 Dec 202500:51:11
The Resolutions of Love in New Year’s Day01 Jan 202600:45:35

Happy New Year! With New Year’s Day on our episode release day, it only felt right to cover this masterpiece from Reputation. Uncle Jerry unknowingly connects this song with many others, blowing Angela’s mind once again. 


We’re taking a short break after this episode, but we’ll see you back here in a few weeks with more poetry!


Works Cited:

Nine Princes in Amber – Roger Zelazny – Aff Link

When Harry Met Sally (1989)

A Tale of Two Cities – Charles Dickens – Aff Link

The Sun Also Rises – Ernest Hemingway – Aff Link

A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning – John Donne


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The Self-Deprecation of Anti-Hero29 Jan 202600:54:06

We’re back and we’re kicking 2026 off with the three remaining tracks from Taylor’s submission to the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Spoiler alert: she was inducted! We’ll talk more about that in the final of these three episodes, but today we are focused on Anti-Hero. Uncle Jerry wonders about Taylor’s psychological status when writing this song and Angela has an A-ha! moment about how the music cues us to maybe feel differently than the lyrics alone would make us feel.


Works Cited:

First Person Deixis

Charles Barkley Nike Commercial

Beauty and the Beast (1991)

Brigid Kaelin on Instagram

Taylor talking about Anti-Hero

Anti-Hero Music Video


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The Satire of Blank Space05 Feb 202600:51:29

In this episode, we are covering the fourth song that Taylor Swift submitted to be considered for induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame—Blank Space. This 1989 track was one of her first pop hits, and Uncle Jerry finds the humorous and feminist lenses the poem was written through to be interesting to dissect. We’ll wrap the conversation up and talk about the songs as a whole collection next week.


Works Cited:

Tabula Rasa

Dactyl

Iamb

Yellow Rose of Texas

The Ballad of Jed Clampett

Gilligan’s Island Theme Song

Ballad Meter

The Gallic Wars

The Twelve Caesars – Suetonius – Aff Link

The Madwoman in the Attic – Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar – Aff Link

Jane Eyre: Deluxe Painted Edition – Charlotte Bronte – Aff Link

The Yellow Wallpaper

Blank Space Music Video

Black Space Voice Memo


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The Cultural Critique of The Last Great American Dynasty12 Feb 202601:07:08

We’re off to Rhode Island by way of St. Louis in this episode! We’re breaking down Taylor Swift’s ‘the last great american dynasty’, a track from 2020’s folklore and the final song she submitted for induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. Uncle Jerry explains how his opinion on this poem changed from his first few readings, and Angela talks through her thoughts on the five submitted songs as a whole and why she thinks Taylor chose them.


Works Cited:

Blue Blood – Craig Unger

A Rose for Emily – William Faulkner

Rebekah Harkness’ Starfish Brooch

The Outrageous Life of Rebekah Harkness, Taylor Swift’s High-Society Muse – Elise Taylor

The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald – Aff Link

The 100 Best Songs of 2020 – Pitchfork

Jacob’s Pillow

the last great american dynasty lyric video


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The Tangled Ambiguity of Ivy19 Feb 202601:18:44
The Exploration of Truth in Cassandra26 Feb 202601:17:11

JOIN US ON PATREON!

In this episode, we are learning all about Cassandra from Greek Mythology, and Cassandra, the Taylor Swift song. Uncle Jerry teaches us Cassandra’s story, we dive into all the rich metaphors, and Angela spills the beans about Taylor’s Kim and Kanye feud. There’s also an existential moment where Angela can’t deal with the question of one universal truth versus many personal truths.


Works Cited:

Taylor Swift and Kanye West Feud

Cassandra in Greek Mythology

The Iliad – Homer

The Odyssey – Homer

The Aeneid – Virgil

Oresteia – Aeschylus

The Greek Myths Box Edition – Robert Graves – Aff Link

The Greek Myths: The Complete and Definitive Edition – Robert Graves – Aff Link

Metamorphoses – Ovid

Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad – Aff Link

Sight Rhyme (or Eye Rhyme)

Seneca's Agamemnon

Cassandra Lyric Video

Concrete PoetryThe Cassandra Complex

The Apollo Archetype


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The Depth Without Darkness in Opalite12 Mar 202601:02:35

Join us today for some lighthearted fun as we discuss Opalite from 2025’s The Life of a Showgirl. When Taylor Swift made this song a single and gave us the most perfect music video in the history of music videos, I felt like we had to cover it. 

Be on the lookout for more Opalite content on Patreon!


Works Cited:

How to Write a Dizain 

Iambs

Trochees

Pluperfect tense

Possession – A.S. Byatt – Aff Link

About Time (2013)

Brooklyn (2015)


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The Exploration of Depression in Evermore05 Mar 202601:07:33

In this episode, we are taking a trip through the wildest winter with evermore from 2020. Uncle Jerry once again blows Angela’s mind with some folklore tropes relating to the dog days, and with some tidbits about Carl Jung’s theory on the Anima.

If you’d like to see us listen to the song and enjoy the episode ad-free, you can now join us on Patreon!

Works Cited:

Cats (2019)

Fats Waller

Apostrophe literary device

Gerard Manley Hopkins

William Somerset Maugham

The Burning of Lord Byron’s Memoirs

Emily Dickinson – burned letters

Jane Austen – burned letters

Charles Dickens Bonfire

The Hero with a Thousand Faces – Joseph Campbell – Aff Link

Carl Jung

The Anima

The Raven – Edgar Allan Poe

Sonnet 29 – William Shakespeare

Evermore lyric video

Evermore x Peter Mashup

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The Psychological Burden of The Albatross19 Mar 202600:59:08
The Feminist Critique of Mad Woman26 Mar 202600:56:32
August – The Folklore Love Triangle Part 102 Apr 202601:08:44

Friends, it's finally here! Over the next three episodes, we are diving into our beloved Folklore Love Triangle. First up is August. Uncle Jerry begins by talking about the narrative of these three songs and how they are woven together across the album, and then we dissect the poem of August. 

These three episodes will all build on each other, and we’ll round out the discussion in week 3. 


Works Cited:

Rashomon Effect

The Rashomon Effect: When Ethnographers Disagree – Karl G. Heider

The Blind Man and The Elephant

Disnarration and the performance of storytelling in Taylor Swift’s folklore and evermore

Split Narratives or Fragmented Narratives

Dramatic Irony

Kenning

The Swiftie and The Scholar Grading Matrix


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Betty – The Folklore Love Triangle Part 209 Apr 202601:07:41
Fate vs. Free Will in The Prophecy23 Apr 202601:21:14

We are getting witchy today as we dive deep into The Prophecy from Taylor Swift’s 2024 album, The Tortured Poets Department. Uncle Jerry teaches us about some specific references to tarot and the occult in literature, and how that shaped a few of his interests. Angela tells the story of a tarot reading that Taylor received from a friend, and how she thinks it inspired this song.

  

Works Cited:

The Collected Poems of W.B. Yeats – William Butler Yeats – Aff Link

Rosicrucian Fellowship

The Secrets of the Belline Oracle – Sylvie Steinbach – Aff Link

Crowley Thoth Tarot Deck

Visconti-Sforza Tarot Cards – The Morgan Library

Visconti Sforza Tarot Cards Cards – Stuart R. Kaplan – Aff Link

Miniature Rider-Waite® Tarot – Pamela C. Smith – Aff Link

Rider Waite Gold Foil Tarot Deck – Aff Link

The Original Rider Waite: The Pictorial Key To The Tarot: An Illustrated Guide – A.E. Waite – Aff Link

Tarot Revelations – Joseph Campbell, Richard Roberts – Aff Link 

A to z Horoscope Maker and Delineator – Llewellyn George – Aff Link

A Treatise on the Astrolabe – Geoffrey Chaucer – Aff Link

Antithesis – Rhetorical Device

Gimpel the Fool: And Other Stories – Isaac Bashevis Singer – Aff Link

The Miller’s Tale – Geoffrey Chaucer

Morphology of the Folktale – V. Propp – Aff Link

Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index

Taylor Swift’s Tarot Card Revelation Proves None of Travis Kelce Romance Was Accidental

Inclusio

The Swiftie and The Scholar Grading Matrix


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Cardigan – The Folklore Love Triangle Part 316 Apr 202601:19:01
The Sentimentalism of Marjorie07 May 202601:01:44
Dr. Uncle Jerry University: Poetry 101 30 Apr 202601:16:22

We’re doing something a bit different today! Some conversations have popped up in various comment sections about why Uncle Jerry prefers specific types of poetry, and which lenses we use to dissect those poems, whether we’re talking about Charles Dickens, Emily Dickenson, or Taylor Swift. So Uncle Jerry put together a lecture explaining how and why he views certain poetic styles the way he does, and explains the different criticism styles and theories we use to understand a poem’s meaning and impact.


Hope you enjoy! Please leave any questions in the comments that he can answer either here or in a later episode. 


Works Cited:

Marxist Literary Criticism

Post-Colonial Criticism

Reader-response theory

Key Theories of Wolfgang Iser

Is There a Text in This Class? – Stanley Fish – Aff Link

Psychological Criticism

Feminist Theory

New Criticism

Felicia Dorothea Hemans

On the Intentional Fallacy

Hyperion – John Keats

Affective Fallacy

Queer Theory

Deconstruction

Semiotics

Critical Race Theory

New Historicism

Stephen Greenblatt and New Historicism

Sketches by Boz – Charles Dickens – Aff Link

Sonnets

Shakespeare's Sonnets & Poems – William Shakespeare – Aff Link

Limerick

Haiku

Ballad Meter (or Common Measure)

Villanelle

Concrete Poetry

Life Studies – Robert Lowell – Aff Link 

The Collected Poems – Sylvia Plath – Aff Link

My Papa’s Waltz – Theodore Roethke

The Real Slim Shady – Eminem

Can Poetry Matter?: Essays on Poetry and American Culture Paperback – Dana Gioia – Aff Link

A Bit Much – Lyndsay Rush – Aff Link

Lyndsay Rush – Instagram

Amanda Gorman

The Swiftie and The Scholar Grading Matrix


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The Christian Tendrils of But Daddy I Love Him14 May 202601:21:22
The Inquisitive Human Nature in How Did It End?21 May 202600:52:40
The Parachute of Childhood in I Knew It, I Knew You18 Jun 202601:13:40

Man, it’s been a while! Today we’re covering the newly released I Knew It, I Knew You from Toy Story 5 and current #1 on the Billboard 100 chart.

Uncle Jerry takes us through the poem, talking all about childhood and friendship and how both this song and the movie franchise showcase the magic of being a kid. 

We bring in a special guest–an expert–at the end to grade the song.


Works Cited:

Homonym

Runnin’ Wild – Some Like It Hot

Volta

Emjambment

Epiphora or Epistrophe

Leaves of Grass – Walt Whitman

Anagnorisis

Epizeuxis

Dramatic Irony

Mnemonic

I Knew It, I Knew You Visualizer

The Swiftie and The Scholar Grading Matrix


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The Light of Stardom in Clara Bow04 Jun 202601:27:24
The Nature of Fame in Mirrorball28 May 202601:12:34
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