Presentation
Speech by Professor Horace Engdahl, Member of the Swedish Academy,
Member of the Nobel Committee for Literature, 10 December 2016.
Your Majesties, Your
Royal Highnesses, Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,
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
higher sense, and makes it mutate. Thus, at one point, emerged the
modern novel from anecdote and letter, thus arose drama in a new age
from high jinx on planks placed on barrels in a marketplace, thus
songs in the vernacular dethroned learned Latin poetry, thus too did
La Fontaine take animal fables and Hans Christian Andersen fairy
tales from the nursery to Parnassian heights. Each time this occurs,
our idea of literature changes.
In itself, it ought not
to be a sensation that a singer/songwriter now stands recipient of
the literary Nobel Prize. In a distant past, all poetry was sung or
tunefully recited, poets were rhapsodes, bards, troubadours; 'lyrics'
comes from 'lyre'. But what Bob Dylan did was not to return to the
Greeks or the Provençals. Instead, he dedicated himself body and
soul to 20th century American popular music, the kind played on radio
stations and gramophone records for ordinary people, white and black:
protest songs, country, blues, early rock, gospel, mainstream music.
He listened day and night, testing the stuff on his instruments,
trying to learn. But when he started to write similar songs, they
came out differently. In his hands, the material changed. From what
he discovered in heirloom and scrap, in banal rhyme and quick wit, in
curses and pious prayers, sweet nothings and crude jokes, he panned
poetry gold, whether on purpose or by accident is irrelevant; all
creativity begins in imitation.
Even after fifty years of
uninterrupted exposure, we are yet to absorb music's equivalent of
the fable's Flying Dutchman. He makes good rhymes, said a critic,
explaining greatness. And it is true. His rhyming is an alchemical
substance that dissolves contexts to create new ones, scarcely
containable by the human brain. It was a shock. With the public
expecting poppy folk songs, there stood a young man with a guitar,
fusing the languages of the street and the bible into a compound that
would have made the end of the world seem a superfluous replay. At
the same time, he sang of love with a power of conviction everyone
wants to own. All of a sudden, much of the bookish poetry in our
world felt anaemic, and the routine song lyrics his colleagues
continued to write were like old-fashioned gunpowder following the
invention of dynamite. Soon, people stopped comparing him to Woody
Guthrie and Hank Williams and turned instead to Blake, Rimbaud,
Whitman, Shakespeare.
In the most unlikely
setting of all - the commercial gramophone record - he gave back to
the language of poetry its elevated style, lost since the Romantics.
Not to sing of eternities, but to speak of what was happening around
us. As if the oracle of Delphi were reading the evening news.
Recognising that
revolution by awarding Bob Dylan the Nobel Prize was a decision that
seemed daring only beforehand and already seems obvious. But does he
get the prize for upsetting the system of literature? Not really.
There is a simpler explanation, one that we share with all those who
stand with beating hearts in front of the stage at one of the venues
on his never-ending tour, waiting for that magical voice. Chamfort
made the observation that when a master such as La Fontaine appears,
the hierarchy of genres - the estimation of what is great and small,
high and low in literature - is nullified. “What matter the rank of
a work when its beauty is of the highest rank?" he wrote. That
is the straight answer to the question of how Bob Dylan belongs in
literature: as the beauty of his songs is of the highest rank.
By means of his oeuvre,
Bob Dylan has changed our idea of what poetry can be and how it can
work. He is a singer worthy of a place beside the Greeks' ἀοιδόι,
beside Ovid, beside the Romantic visionaries, beside the kings and
queens of the Blues, beside the forgotten masters of brilliant
standards. If people in the literary world groan, one must remind
them that the gods don't write, they dance and they sing. The good
wishes of the Swedish Academy follow Mr. Dylan on his way to coming
bandstands.
Copyright ©
The Nobel Foundation 2016
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