originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Steve Edmunds:
what would said naysayers wish to say about Homer, or Virgil? (His music isn't edgy enough?) I'm thrilled that there are voices charged with putting forth their choices for consideration who've moved Dylan's work into a category for which it was never thought to be worthy of consideration. Can anyone name an artist in the past couple of hundred years who has written so compellingly, and movingly, regarding the varieties of human aspiration, foolishness, vulnerability, weakness, folly, and cruelty, and suffering, and been able to convey those explorations so directly to the rest of us, in such a visceral manner? I'm a college dropout so maybe I'm missing something
I don't really object to Dylan winning the prize. But really, this claim is silly. I'm sure you can name 10 such writers off the top of your head, college drop out or not, with the 19th and 20th century to work from. Names in this thread alone would include GBS, Proust and Kafka. How about Tolstoy, Dosoevsky, Flaubert, George Eliot, Dickens, Whitman, Dickinson, Melville? One could go on.