"YOU MAKE EVERYTHING YOURS!
WE ALL DO IT!"
(Bob Dylan"s Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech-from SPARKNOTES)
CULTURAL APPROPRIATION
is as old as influences.Cave art was never
original.
Time hides sources-so we praise Rumi not
Shams
Plato,not Socrates.Black blues sold by white
boys.
Led Zeppelin and Rolling Stones.BUT
acknowledgement is truth..
Reparations for violation of
copyright.Restitution of Royalties.
Repair of plundering relationships.NAMING
YOUR SOURCE.
Journalists hide informers for their
survival.
But work is gold,and gold works.RESTORE THE
BALANCE
If this poem was stolen from your
consciousness,i apologize.
If a song is made from these words,i am
happy.
If you choose to adapt these ideas,that is
your right.
Collage,montage,influences are the stone
soup of art
Add more of YOUR stones.START AN
AVALANCHE!
Bob Dylan delivered what was
described as an "eloquent"
lecture this month as part of his Nobel prize requirements—but one writer
says he may have approached the task like a high school student with an overdue
project. Dylan discussed three favorite works from childhood and Andrea Pitzer
at Slate suspects the Nobel Prize winner for literature may have
cribbed much of the Moby Dick
portion from SparkNotes. She says at least 20 of the 78 sentences involved
strongly resemble SparkNotes passages and compares several of them side by side.
Multiple phrases, including "Ahab's lust for vengeance," appear both in
SparkNotes and Dylan's talk, but not in Moby Dick itself. He had to give the
talk to collect $922,000 in prize money. "Some men who receive injuries are led
to God, others are led to bitterness," a quote that one blogger thought Dylan had invented, appears to be based on
SparkNotes. Pitzer suggests that Dylan donate some of the prize money to the
SparkNotes writer, though others are more forgiving. University of Minnesota
music professor Alex Lubet tells the Star-Tribune that
Dylan's lecture shouldn't be treated like a classroom assignment. "His lecture
is wild and strange," Lubet says. "It’s meant to be a post-modern work of art.
Any kind of a collage technique is fair game." In a 2012 Rolling Stone
interview, Dylan addressed claims he had lifted lyrics, saying that in
songwriting, "You make everything yours. We all do it."
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