Monday, April 4, 2016

Stop Criticizing Taylor Swift's Squad



Go to any newsstand in any city and pick up any fashion magazine. You’re almost guaranteed to come across a picture of Taylor Swift and her now almost infamous ‘squad.’ Last summer, it might have been an article about how Taylor Swift and her group of friends are empowering women. But these days, Taylor Swift’s squad is under fire. It seems to be rubbing people the wrong way… a group of tall, thin, and beautiful women uniting in a group that seems so exclusive and unattainable that it actually turns people off. What was once seen as a powerful challenge to a patriarchal industry is now being viewed in a highly negative light and being deemed detrimental to the ideology of feminism. 

So why is that?

At this point, everyone and their mother knows that I’m a huge Taylor Swift fan. While my natural instinct is to defend her, I pride myself in never having blindly followed what she does. I’m an educated twenty year old who is perfectly capable of forming my own opinions. (That said, I won’t be buying Kanye’s new album.) So I know that Taylor Swift, a 26 year old woman, is not faultless. In the ten year span of her career, from ages 16 to 26 she has surely made mistakes. She has surely misspoken or misstepped or crossed a line. Maybe all of the above. She is not faultless. But attacking Taylor Swift because her feminism isn’t enough? To me, that seems to be crossing a line all on its own.

Feminism is a complex set of beliefs, but at its most simplistic, it is the belief that women should be given the same rights and privileges that men have. But beyond that, it extends to the idea that in a culture where the entire world is tearing women down, women should be working to empower each other and build each other up instead of joining in the takedown. 

That’s what Taylor Swift’s “squad” is. A group of talented, powerful, hardworking women who support and uplift each other. This article details the hypocrisy of feminists who criticize Taylor Swift and her squad for "not being feminist enough." The author puts it best, "Tearing down a woman once she's reached a pinnacle of success (or ever, really), for striving too hard and wanting too much — that flies in the face of feminist values. To celebrate feminism is to allow women to make different choices. It's about allowing for more — and allowing for the idea that women can face different and multi-layered oppression. But it doesn't suggest that one experience trumps another. Or that someone with a more rudimentary understanding of the concept can't participate in the conversation.” That last point, about understanding, seems to be the root of many people’s problems with Taylor Swift’s brand of feminism. They claim that she doesn’t fully understand it, and therefore she shouldn’t participate in the conversation.

And that’s bullshit. Because if she wasn’t participating in the conversation at all, she would be criticized for that, too. And since when does not having full knowledge of a subject invalidate your views on it? No one fully understands politics (you’re lying to yourself if you think you do), but everyone wants to join in that conversation.

Leave Taylor Swift alone. She's not perfect. Expecting her to be perfect and criticizing her when she doesn't meet your expectations makes you a participant in the takedown culture. Appreciate the fact that the women in your lives—your daughters and your sisters and your wives and your friends—have someone in the spotlight who takes every opportunity to tell them that they are strong and important and valuable and capable. You should be doing that. We should all be doing that.

5 comments:

  1. Where's Chris Crocker when you need him? Leave Taylor alone! I'm not a fan of her, but I do respect what she is doing in the music industry. I really do respect her stance against the streaming giants (Spotify). When you're put on that high pedestal that many artists are on, it's so easy to watch someone fall and crash & burn (Kanye). But she's remained successful and does so much for young women everywhere that I applaud her for that.

    ReplyDelete
  2. People expect so much of celebrities, and they all want them to fight for their causes. I agree that its crazy to say she isn't feminist enough. Women should stand together, not put one another down. Thanks for posting.

    ReplyDelete
  3. As much of a metal fan that I am, I have to admit that I love Taylor Swift's music haha. It's ridiculous and hypocritical to tell anyone that they aren't doing enough to support a certain cause. If you were to donate $20 to a cancer relief fund, how would you feel if someone told you you're not doing enough because you didn't donate $50? Any support is good support, and there's no such thing as "not enough".

    ReplyDelete
  4. I used to be a pretty big Taylor Swift fan until I wised up to some of the really messed up things she does in the name of feminism. For example, having one female producer in a team of all men, when she clearly is able to pick who she wants (she isn't just picking whoever will record with her, I mean) then giving a 'women can do anything' speech was at the very least very hypocritical, her Nicki Minaj feud in which she tried to call Nicki whiny for questioning systematic racial oppression that she has never nor will ever experience, and the squad. Now I'm not a big fan of her squad because in my eyes it's the mean girls from high school. It's the elitist group that would never be seen with someone who doesn't fit their idea of cool or hip; and it's almost 100% straight, white, and classically beautiful women.

    I don't have a problem with Taylor Swift calling herself a feminist, but I have a big problem with the media labeling her as Queen Feminist when she is the embodiment of White Feminism - non-inclusive.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I get what you're saying, and like I said, she's not perfect. But she's also been extremely willing to own up and admit to her mistakes. Like you brought up the Nicki Minaj example. Taylor was way out of line in that situation (though in her defense, I think she just spoke too quickly. At the time, headlines were already blaring "Nicki blasts Taylor" and I think she took that at face value, though Nicki's comments weren't directed at her at all. But saying that she called Nicki whiny for questioning systematic racial oppression suggests that she realized and dismissed the issue, when in reality, she didn't even know that race was what was being discussed. Yeah, she should have done her research before firing off a tweet, but neither Taylor nor Nicki had malicious intentions.) But as soon as Taylor realized her mistake, she publicly apologized and owned up to it, and spoke about the actual issue at hand.

    And as far as the squad is concerned... they are her friends. The whole "girl squad" phenomenon surrounding Taylor Swift has been completely cultivated by the media... there was no word for it until they gave it one. They are literally just her friends, the people she hangs out with, the women who she associates with. And they actually are quite a diverse group. Zendaya, Uzo Aduba, Selena Gomez, Serayah, Alessia Cara, and Camila Cabello represent just some of the racial diversity of the group. Then you have Cara Delevigne who is openly bisexual, and Ruby Rose who is openly gender-fluid. And THEN you have Lorde, Lena Dunham, Hayley Williams, and Avril Lavigne, all women who don't conform to the idea of "classic beauty." So to look at this group of women who are all beautiful and successful in their own right and label them as "the mean girls from high school" isn't an accurate reading of the group. They are all friends, they all support and uplift each other, and they are all on their way to becoming women with varying levels of power in the entertainment industry. It actually kind of seems to go AGAINST feminism to write all of that off because some of them look a certain way. While they may appear to be an "elitist" group, they are not.

    Taylor is obviously not the Queen Feminist, but like you said, it's the media that gave her that label. But for someone who has been the victim of endless sexism at the hands of the media and the general public, I feel that she has every right to celebrate and call attention to a movement that would liberate her and her female peers from the unfair standards to which they are being held.

    ReplyDelete