
Taylor Swift moves on the field after the NFL Super Bowl 58 football game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs, Sunday, Feb. 11, 2024, in Las Vegas. The Chiefs won 25-22. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
The course Taylor Swift, gender, and communication, will be offered for the fall 2024 semester, and will focus on Swift’s cultural and musical impact and her portrayal in the media.
Are you ready for it, Penn State students?
Penn State Berks announced that the school will offer a Taylor Swift course called Taylor Swift, gender, and communication for the fall 2024 semester.
The course will have room for 100 students, with 50 spots reserved for current students at Penn State Berks, and the other 50 available to incoming first-year students.
While classes examining both the musical and business aspects of Swift’s career have been offered previously at other colleges, Penn State Berks said its Swift curriculum will be unique, in that it will focus on Swift’s cultural and musical impact and her portrayal in the media.
The course will examine the historical intersections of music and politics, and gendered expectations of female performers with an emphasis on the media’s treatment of Swift as she shifted from country to pop music, challenges faced by young female musicians as they move from adolescence to adulthood, and the media’s tendency to pit successful women against each other.
Taylor Swift, gender, and communication, which will be taught in Swift’s hometown of Wyomissing, will be cross-listed as a communication arts and sciences and a women’s studies course.
The course was developed and will be taught by Michele Ramsey, associate professor of communication arts and sciences and of women’s, gender, and sexuality studies.
Ramsey admittedly hasn’t been a longtime “Swiftie.” However, she took an interest in Swift when she noticed the amplified online criticism of Swift’s songwriting, accusations of her lip synching, and Swifties dancing in the movie theaters and at her performances — which inspired her to create this course.
“When you watch social media posts of the concerts or ‘Eras Tour’ movie screenings, you see so many important things happening,” Ramsey said. “You see legions of women — grandmothers, moms, young women, teens, tweens, younger girls and those who don’t fit into our strict social constructions of gender and sex identity — daring to take up space to enjoy something they love together.”
Support Our Cause
Thank you for taking the time to read our work. Before you go, we hope you'll consider supporting our values-driven journalism, which has always strived to make clear what's really at stake for Pennsylvanians and our future.
Since day one, our goal here at The Keystone has always been to empower people across the commonwealth with fact-based news and information. We believe that when people are armed with knowledge about what's happening in their local, state, and federal governments—including who is working on their behalf and who is actively trying to block efforts aimed at improving the daily lives of Pennsylvania families—they will be inspired to become civically engaged.


More than half the states have issued AI guidance for schools. Pennsylvania is not one of them.
In the absence of federal rules, at least 28 states have issued frameworks for K-12 schools. Agencies in at least 28 states and the District of...

Shapiro joins lawsuit to claw back education funding withheld by Trump administration
Pennsylvania joined 23 other states and the District of Columbia in challenging what they call the federal government’s unlawful withholding of...

Opinion: Quality mentorship: the secret to PA teacher success and retention
On my first day as a teacher in a Philadelphia public school, I stood helpless in front of a class of 33 students, nearly all of whom were off task....

Trump administration withholds $230 million for Pennsylvania schools
Education leaders learned of the freeze Monday, hours before the money was due to be available. Pennsylvania education leaders are scrambling after...

Philadelphia’s schools accused of failing to properly inspect asbestos in buildings
The district is charged with eight counts of violating the federal Toxic Substances Control Act for allegedly failing to perform inspections in a...