Song of the North Country: A Midwest Framework to the Songs of Bob Dylan

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Song of the North Country: A Midwest Framework to the Songs of Bob Dylan
Authors and Contributors      By (author) David Pichaske
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:384
Category/GenreTheory of music and musicology
Rock and Pop
ISBN/Barcode 9781441197665
ClassificationsDewey:782.42164092
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Continuum Publishing Corporation
Imprint Continuum Publishing Corporation
Publication Date 8 April 2010
Publication Country United States

Description

A remarkably fresh piece of Dylan scholarship, focusing on the profound impact that his Midwestern roots have had on his songs, politics, and prophetic character.

Author Biography

David Pichaske is Professor of English at Southwest Minnesota State University. He is the author of many books, several related to rural literature and themes, including Rooted: Six Midwest Writers of Place. He has published on a range of subjects from rock music and American culture to T.S. Eliot and Chaucer. A three-time Fulbright Lecturer to Central Europe and Outer Mongolia, Pichaske is the author of Poland in Transition: 1989-1991. As editor of Spoon River Poetry Press, Pichaske has published Leo Dangel, Bill Holm, Norbert Blei, Linda Hasselstrom, Bill Kloefkorn, and Dave Etter, among significant rural writers. He first published on Dylan in 1972.

Reviews

"Pichaske (English, Southwest Minnesota State Univ.) offers an interesting exploration of how Dylan's early years in Minnesota influenced his songs and writings. [...] The author is steeped in Dylan's voluminous compositions and other writings, and in the literary legacies of the Midwest, and he uses all this material to good effect. Adding a significant title to the corpus of Dylan studies is not an easy task, but Pichaske succeeds. Including helpful notes and an extensive but far from inclusive bibliography, this book fits into the literature of both popular music and literary studies." -R.D. Cohen, CHOICE, September 2010 'Pichaske manages to keep the action keen for the less-than-devout students of Dylanology, his lively writing suggesting the playful professor' Word Magazine, August 2010 'Pichaske offers and understandably more scholarly view of Dylan's relation to his home town and its environs...gems include a chapter on Dylan's Midwestern pronunciation which is, oddly, quite compelling.' -- Record Collector Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 'From wordplay and pronunciation in the chapter ''And the Language That He Used,'' to the influence of education, politics, religion and the judicial system upon Dylan in 'Bob Dylan's Prairie Populism,' it might be said there's something for everyone amid these 303 pages.' -- http://davidmarxbookreviews.wordpress.com As a capacious American studies sourcebook... Song of the North Country persuasively positions Dylan in an American cannon that includes Fitzgerald, Cather, Frost, Kerouac, Steinbeck, Arthur Miller, Sinclair Lewis, Meridel LeSeur, Robert Bly, Garrison Keillor, Hamlin Garland, William Gass, and Leo Marx. -- American Studies Vol. 51