Explainer: Are Bob Dylan's Songs 'Literature'?


Autoria(s): Mccooey, David
Data(s)

14/10/2016

Resumo

Bob Dylan has won this year’s Nobel Prize for Literature. The media has reported on this surprising choice by asking musicians, poets, and writers if Dylan’s songs are indeed “literature”. Irvine Welsh, the author of Trainspotting (1993), made it clear on Twitter that he didn’t think they were: If you’re a ‘music’ fan, look it up in the dictionary. Then ‘literature’. Then compare and contrast. So are song lyrics a type of literature or, more specifically, poetry? The English poet Glyn Maxwell thinks not. In On Poetry (2011), he writes that “Songs are strung upon sounds, poems upon silence”. Inhabiting silence makes poetry the harder and more important art form. Music, Maxwell writes, makes lyrics seem better than when they appear on the whiteness of the page.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30087616

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Conversation Media Group

Relação

https://theconversation.com/explainer-are-bob-dylans-songs-literature-67061

Direitos

2016, Conversation Media Group

Palavras-Chave #Nobel Prize #Literature #Bob Dylan #Song Lyrics
Tipo

Media Article