Bob Dylan Nobel prize speech: this is 'truly beyond
2016-12-11 11:03阅读:
Bob Dylan
admitted he was
stunned and surprised when he was told he had won a Nobel prize
because he had never stopped to consider whether his songs were
literature.
Dylan, whose speech was read out by the US ambassador to
Sweden
at the annual
awards dinner, said the prize was “something I never could have
imagined or seen coming”.
He said from an early age he had read and absorbed the works of
past winners and giants of literature such as Kipling, Shaw, Thomas
Mann, Pearl Buck, Albert Camus and Hemingway. But said it was
“truly beyond words” that he was joining those names on the winners
list. “If someone had ever told me that I had the slightest chance
of winning the Nobel prize, I would have to think that I’d have
about the sam
e odds as standing on the moon,” he wrote.
The announcement that Dylan had won the literature prize caused
controversy with critics arguing his lyrics were not literature. On
learning he had been awarded the literature prize Dylan said he
thought of Shakespeare. “When he was writing Hamlet, I’m sure he
was thinking about a lot of different things: ‘Who’re the right
actors for these roles? How should this be staged? Do I really want
to set this in Denmark?’
“His creative vision and ambitions were no doubt at the forefront
of his mind, but there were also more mundane matters to consider
and deal with. ‘Is the financing in place? Are there enough good
seats for my patrons? Where am I going to get a human skull?’ I
would bet that the farthest thing from Shakespeare’s mind was the
question: ‘Is this literature?’
“Like Shakespeare, I too am often occupied with the pursuit of my
creative endeavours and dealing with all aspects of life’s mundane
matters. ‘Who are the best musicians for these songs? Am I
recording in the right studio? Is this song in the right key?’ Some
things never change, even in 400 years. Not once have I ever had
the time to ask myself ‘are my songs literature?’ So, I do thank
the Swedish academy, both for taking the time to consider that very
question and ultimately, for providing such a wonderful
answer.”
Earlier during the awards ceremony
a
nervous Patti Smith stumbled through Bob Dylan’s A Hard Rain’s
A-Gonna Fall in
a performance given to mark the handing over of the absent Dylan’s
Nobel prize for literature.
Formally presenting the award Horace Engdahl, a Swedish literary
critic and member of the Swedish academy behind the prize,
responded to international criticism of the choice of a popular
lyricist as recipient. In defence of the decision, Engdahl said
that when Dylan’s songs were heard first in the 1960s: “All of a
sudden, much of the bookish poetry in our world felt
anaemic.”
The academy’s choice of Dylan, Engdahl added, speaking in Swedish,
“seemed daring only beforehand and already seems obvious”.
And it was an unconventional prize-giving night in more ways than
one. Dylan’s failure to attend the august gathering in Stockholm
meant that Smith, the American singer famous for her 1975 album
Horses and the hit song Because the Night, was attending as his
proxy. The occasion proved too much for the singer, 69, who
faltered after a few verses.
Forgetting the lyric “I saw a black branch with blood that kept
drippin’,” she apologised quietly but profusely to the
jewel-bedecked audience and asked if she could start that section
of the song again. “I am so nervous,” she explained. Smith was
encouraged by applause from the gathered dignitaries and members of
the Swedish royal family.
Her performance followed Engdahl’s justificatory speech, which
opened with the question: “What brings about the great shifts in
the world of literature? Often it is when someone seizes upon a
simple, overlooked form, discounted as art in the high sense, and
makes it mutate.”
In this way, Engdahl argued, the novel had once emerged from
anecdote and letters, while drama had eventually derived from games
and performance. “In the distant past, all poetry was sung or
tunefully recited,” he said. Dylan had dedicated himself to music
played for ordinary people and tried to copy it.
“But when he started to write songs, they came out differently,”
Engdahl said. “He panned poetry gold, whether on purpose or by
accident is irrelevant … He gave back to poetry its elevated style,
lost since the romantics.”