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Doctrix Periwinkle's avatar

One correction: um, she's actually an anti-hero: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b1kbLwvqugk

One of the reasons I think Taylor Swift is the icon onto which US culture is projecting everything is because the culture is increasingly fragmented. She's one of the very few cultural touchstones everyone will recognize. Even if one professes their hatred for all things Swifty, they'll still get the reference if I come back with the response, "well, haters gonna hate hate hate hate hate." This kind of shared reference is increasingly rare, but necessary for a society to function.

I think a lot of this fracturing of popular culture is due to the algorithm and abundance driven media bubbles, but I also think a lot comes out of the secularization of US society. It's not just that people don't go to church; it's that Americans increasingly don't share religious cultural references.

In an earlier time, there was a lot of antipathy directed towards Madonna, similarly a pop star and savvy business woman. Many of those who liked Madonna described themselves as anti-religious, and many religious people felt the way she played with religious imagery was sacrilegious. But everyone recognized the Christian references. (The original video for "Like a Prayer" is, as they say, a very rich text: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=79fzeNUqQbQ )

Taylor Swift, who is just a mortal human woman, gets turned into the vehicle for so many conflicting ideals because for an icon to have power it must be shared. And there's so little in the way of cultural imagery that's shared in the US right now that she gets the whole burden.

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Glen Williamson's avatar

Beautifully said, dear Spencer. Worship through the ages.

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