Taylor Swift’s current album, “The Tortured Poet’s Department,” which was released on Friday, has sparked criticism regarding her take on American history, including its darker sides. Swift’s critics and some fans are offended by the singer’s perspective in the lyrics of her song, “I Hate It Here.”
What are the lyrics of Taylor Swift’s song “I Hate It Here”?
While many fans appreciate the album’s music and speculate on references to Joe Alwyn, Matty Healy, and Kim Kardashian, others are critical of the song “I Hate It Here” for its provocative lyrics.
In the song, Swift sings, “My friends used to play a game where
We would pick a decade
We wished we could live in instead of this
I’d say the 1830s but without all the racists
And getting married off for the highest bid
Everyone would look down ’cause it wasn’t fun now
Seems like it was never even fun back then
Nostalgia is a mind’s trick
If I’d been there, I’d hate it
It was freezing in the palace”
Swift appears to be making a statement about nostalgia, but her fans are dissatisfied with how she conveyed it, expressing their displeasure on social media platforms. Her song of the 1830s might mention ‘palaces’ but people are pointing out what else it involved. Thirty years before the Civil War, slavery remained legal throughout the American South.
The trending topic “1830” on Twitter generated a variety of reactions, with some truly angered by Swift’s alleged insensitivity and others mocking her with the social media trend.
“Pretty astonishing to stipulate that she wants to live in the 1830s, ‘except without the racists,’ and not mention slavery, so slavery still exists but everyone’s chill about it,” An X user wrote
“IS THIS REAL ??,” a baffled fan commented, as another wrote, “This can’t actually be real?”
Why are people angry with Taylor Swift’s I Hate It Here?
Critics are pointing out two major flaws in Swift’s reference to the 1830s. For starters, America’s intolerance throughout that period went beyond racism, with slavery reaching its peak.
Second, in 1830, Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act into law, which resulted in the Trail of Tears, a genocide that displaced many Native Americans from the American Southeast to Oklahoma.
Although Swift attempts to clarify her point of view in the succeeding lines of the song, many listeners remain concentrated on the initial lyrics and refuse to consider her explanation.