NORA Ephron once asked Bob Dylan whether he considered himself a poet, by which she meant if he thought his words could “stand without the music”. Dylan responded, “They would stand, but I don’t read them. I’d rather sing them.”
Clearly, he’s not alone: on Thursday, we learned that Dylan had won the 2016 Nobel Prize in literature, “for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition”. In other words, Dylan won for being a poet who happens to sing. It’s about time.
Joining the ranks of William Butler Yeats (1923), T. S. Eliot (1948), William Faulkner (1949), Gabriel García Márquez (1982) and Toni Morrison (1993), the last American winner, the award establishes that Dylan is a writer first and a rock star second. That his words, as Dylan once said himself, stand alone: “It ain’t the melodies that are important, man, it’s the words.”
In recognising Dylan, the Nobel committee no doubt meant to honour those words, but also to stir things up — to unsettle the literary establishment by inviting a pop star to crash their party; perhaps, also, to send a not-so-subtle rebuke to a generation of American authors it deems unfit for the honour.
As much as the Swedish Academy might feel as if it is shaking things up, though, conferring the award on Dylan is actually a fairly safe move. After all, his lyrics stand up well on the page; they comport themselves as poems. Witness the collection of lyrics edited by literary critic Christopher Ricks in 2014, presenting Dylan’s words as if they were torn from Wordsworth and Coleridge’s LyricalBallads. Recall that in that same year, Dylan’s handwritten draft of Like a Rolling Stone sold for more than $2 million. His literary cred was already established.