Bob Dylan’s abrupt abandonment of overtly political songwriting in
the mid-1960s caused an uproar among critics and fans. In Wicked
Messenger, acclaimed cultural-political commentator Mike Marqusee
advances the new thesis that Dylan did not drop politics from his
songs but changed the manner of his critique to address the changing
political and cultural climate and, more importantly, his own evolving
aesthetic. Wicked Messenger is also a riveting political history of
the United States in the 1960s. Tracing the development of the
decade’s political and cultural dissent movements, Marqusee shows
how their twists and turns were anticipated in the poetic
aesthetic—anarchic, unaccountable, contradictory, punk— of Dylan's
mid-sixties albums, as well as in his recent artistic ventures in
Chronicles, Vol. I and Masked and Anonymous. Dylan’s anguished,
self-obsessed, prickly artistic evolution, Marqusee asserts, was a
deeply creative response to a deeply disturbing situation. "He can no
longer tell the story straight," Marqusee concludes, "because any
story told straight is a false one."
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Bob Dylan and the 1960s; Chimes of Freedom, revised and expanded
Product details
ISBN
9781609801151
Published
2017
Publisher
Random House Publishing Services
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author