The 2016 Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded to "Bob Dylan" for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition”.
Bob Dylan, Age 75 was born on May 24, 1941 in Duluth, Minnesota. He grew up in a Jewish
middle-class family in the city of Hibbing. As a teenager he played in
various bands and with time his interest in music deepened, with a
particular passion for American folk music and blues. One of his idols
was the folk singer Woody Guthrie. He was also influenced by the early
authors of the Beat Generation, as well as by modernist poets.
Dylan’s tours in 1965 and 1966 attracted
a lot of attention. For a period he was accompanied by film maker D.A. Pennebaker, who documented life around the stage in what would come
to be the movie Dont Look Back (1967). Dylan has recorded a large number
of albums revolving around topics like the social conditions of man,
religion, politics and love. The lyrics have continuously been published
in new editions, under the title Lyrics. As an artist, he is strikingly
versatile; he has been active as painter, actor and scriptwriter.
Besides his large production of albums, Dylan has published
experimental work like Taran-tula (1971) and the collection Writings and
Drawings (1973). He has written the autobiog-raphy Chronicles (2004),
which depicts memories from the early years in New York and which
provides glimpses of his life at the center of popular culture. Since
the late 1980s, Bob Dylan has toured persistently, an undertaking called
the “Never-Ending Tour”. Dylan has the status of an icon. His influence
on contemporary music is profound, and he is the object of a steady
stream of secondary literature.
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