Taylor! Harry! Celebrities Who Have Had College Courses Taught About Them

A topic of conversation. Over the years, certain celebrities have left an imprint on their industry — which inspired professors to introduce a course about their impact.

Taylor Swift‘s discography left an impression on Brittany Spanos, who later created a class on the singer at New York University’s Clive Davis Institute.

“This course proposes to deconstruct both the appeal and aversions to Taylor Swift through close readings of her music and public discourse as it relates to her own growth as an artist and a celebrity,” the description for the course read in February 2022.

The class tackled topics that included Swift’s music, entrepreneurship, durability and the mark her career left on the industry. At the time, Spanos noted it was a “dream” to spearhead a course on her favorite artist.

“I hope to help them rethink how to engage with one of the world’s biggest and sometimes divisive stars, in the same way Clive professors like Jason King, Vivien Goldman and Joe Levy did for me when I took their courses,” she told Variety at the time, before adding that it was “such an honor” to share her expert point of view with the students.

Her former professor King also explained how bringing the course to life was a “no brainer” for the department. “[Spanos is] a Taylor fan but she also understands how to contextualize her culturally, and get students to think more deeply about her and her music through the lens of gender, feminism, race, and class, and other categories related to identity, and that deeper thinking is what this program is all about,” he shared with Variety.

Later that year, Texas State University announced they would be starting a class in spring 2023 that focused around Harry Styles.

“I’ve always wanted to teach a history class that is both fun, but also covers a period that students have lived through and relate to,” associate professor of digital history Dr. Louie Dean Valencia told NBC in July 2022. “By studying the art, activism, consumerism and fandom around Harry Styles, I think we’ll be able to get to some very relevant contemporary issues. I think it’s so important for young people to see what is important to them reflected in their curriculum.”

Scroll down to see what other celebrities inspired a class to be taught about them:


Nicki Minaj
School: UC Berkeley  Course: Black Barbie Femmecee & Hip Hop Feminisms Stephen Lovekin/Shutterstock
Lana Del Rey
School: New York University’s Clive Davis Institute Course: Topics in Recorded Music: Lana Del Rey Scott Kirkland/National Geograph/Shutterstock
Taylor Swift
School: New York University's Clive Davis Institute Course: Untitled Andrew H. Walker/Shutterstock
Harry Styles
School: Texas State University Course: Harry Styles and the Cult of Celebrity: Identity, the Internet and European Pop Culture Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock
Kanye West
School: Georgia State University Course: Kanye Versus Everybody Image Press Agency/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Beyonce
School: Rutgers University Course: Politicizing Beyoncé Statements Richard Young/Shutterstock
Jay-Z
School: Texas Georgetown University Course: Sociology of Hip-Hop: JAY-Z John Salangsang/Shutterstock
Miley Cyrus
School: Skidmore College Course: The Sociology of Miley Cyrus: Race, Class, Gender and Media Rob Latour/Shutterstock
Lady Gaga
School: University of South Carolina Course: Lady Gaga and the Sociology of Fame Anthony Harvey/Shutterstock for BAFTA
James Franco
School: Columbia College Hollywood Course: Master Class: Editing James Franco … With James Franco Marion Curtis/StarPix for HBO/Shutterstock
Madonna
School: University of Amsterdam Course: Madonna the Phenomenon Matt Baron/Shutterstock
Sean Combs
School:  New York University Course: Sean Combs and Urban Culture Chelsea Lauren/Shutterstock
Bruce Springsteen
School: Rutgers University Course: Bruce Springsteen's Theology Evan Agostini/Invision/AP/Shutterstock
Michael Jackson
School: Clark Atlanta University Course: Michael Jackson: The Business of Music Globe Photos/Mediapunch/Shutterstock
Elvis
School: University of Iowa Course: American Popular Arts: Elvis as Anthology Moviestore/Shutterstock

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