Bob Dylan expresses awe over Nobel Prize, alludes to Shakespeare

SHARE Bob Dylan expresses awe over Nobel Prize, alludes to Shakespeare
734224630353.jpg

From left, Elisabeth Bootsma, chemistry laureate J. Fraser Stoddart, Princess Madeleine, physics laureate Duncan Haldane, Queen Silvia, Carl-Henrik Heldin, chairman of the Nobel Foundation, Crown Princess Victoria, physics laureate Michael Kosterlitz, Princess Sofia and physics laureate Jean-Pierre Sauvage sit at the table of Honour at the 2016 Nobel Prize banquet at the Stockholm City Hall, Sweden, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2016. | Henrik Montgomery/TT News Agency via AP

STOCKHOLM — Bob Dylan has expressed awe at receiving the Nobel Prize in literature and thanked the Swedish Academy for including him among the “giants” of writing.

Dylan was absent from Saturday’s award ceremony and banquet in Stockholm. But in remarks read by the U.S. ambassador, he alluded to the debate about whether the award should go to a songwriter.

Dylan said when Shakespeare wrote “Hamlet,” he probably was thinking about which actors to pick and where to find a skull.

In his words: “I’m sure the farthest thing from Shakespeare’s mind was: ‘Is this literature?’”

Dylan said he too focuses on “mundane matters” such as recording in the right key, not on whether his songs are literature.

He thanked the Academy for considering the question and “providing such a wonderful answer.”

The Latest
Imanaga makes success look so simple, it’s easy to forget to ask him how he’s handling life alone in a huge new city halfway around the world from home.
Scottie Scheffler’s recent arrest brings up a man who followed an ideal.
Those two teens were among five people in a vehicle “traveling at a high rate of speed” Saturday in the 3800 block of Harrison Street when it failed to yield to a traffic signal and collided with another vehicle about 11:10 p.m., police said.
Police responded to a reported kidnapping Sunday in the 5500 block of North Austin Avenue about 4:39 p.m. where a witness said they saw a woman and child being forced into an SUV by two men, police said.
Protesters marched through the neighborhood after the rally, flying Palestinian flags and wearing kaffiyehs. They called on Chicago leaders to divest from Israel and sought the release of Illinois inmates wrongfully convicted and sentenced.