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Popular music serves as a powerful cultural medium through which social ideologies, identities, and gender relations are expressed and contested, and the songs of Taylor Swift offer a compelling site for feminist meaning-making in contemporary popular culture. This study examined the feminist meanings embedded in selected Taylor Swift songs, The Man, Shake It Off, Bejeweled, Clean, and You’re On Your Own, Kid, using a qualitative textual analysis grounded in Ferdinand de Saussure’s semiotic theory. Specifically, the study aimed to identify key signifiers related to gender, power, and identity; interpret the signified meanings of these signifiers through semiotic analysis; and discuss their implications for contemporary understandings of feminism. Guided by Saussure’s signifier–signified framework, the analysis revealed that Swift’s lyrics were rich in culturally loaded signs that exposed gendered double standards, challenged patriarchal norms, and articulated female selfhood. Signifiers such as man, boss, bitch, diamonds, penthouse, clean, and on your own functioned not merely as stylistic elements but as semiotic tools that conveyed broader social meanings related to inequality, emotional autonomy, resilience, and empowerment. The signified meanings of these signs reflected feminist concerns about women’s marginalization, the policing of female behavior, and the pursuit of agency in both personal and public spheres. The findings further suggested that Swift’s music reframed vulnerability as strength and self-worth as a feminist act. Ultimately, the study demonstrated that popular music can serve as a significant cultural site where feminism is represented as lived, emotional, and accessible, thereby shaping contemporary feminist discourse through personal yet collective narratives.