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Tearing the World Apart cover art

Tearing the World Apart

By: Nina Goss - editor, Eric Hoffman - editor
Narrated by: James Killavey
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Summary

Bob Dylan is many things to many people. Folk prodigy. Rock poet. Quiet gentleman. Dionysian impresario. Cotton Mather. Stage hog. Each of these Dylan creations comes with its own accessories, including a costume, a hairstyle, a voice, a lyrical register, a metaphysics, an audience, and a library of commentary. Each Bob Dylan joins a collective cast that has made up his persona for more than 50 years.

No version of Dylan turns out uncomplicated, but the postmillennial manifestation seems peculiarly contrary - a tireless and enterprising antiquarian; a creator of singular texts and sounds through promiscuous poaching; an artist of innovation and uncanny renewal. This is a Dylan of persistent surrender from and engagement with a world he perceives as broken and enduring, addressing us from a past that is lost and yet forever present.

Tearing the World Apart participates in the creation of the postmillennial Bob Dylan by exploring three central records of the 21st century: Love and Theft (2001), Modern Times (2006), and Tempest (2012) - along with the 2003 film Masked and Anonymous, which Dylan helped write and in which he appears as an actor and musical performer.

The collection of essays does justice to this difficult Bob Dylan by examining his method and effects through a disparate set of viewpoints. Listeners will find a variety of critical contexts and cultural perspectives as well as a range of experiences as members of Dylan's audience. The essays in Tearing the World Apart illuminate, as a prism might, their intransigent subject from enticing and intersecting angles.

©2017 University Press of Mississippi (P)2018 University Press Audiobooks

Critic reviews

"I learned much, took many notes, went down some new trails, and sang along the way." (David Gaines, author of In Dylan Town: A Fan's Life

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Terrible narrator

One of the worst narrators I’ve heard on Audible. Clearly didnt have a clue about what he was reading. One small example- Dylan was a fan of the French poet Rimbaud, pronounced Rambo, or strictly Rhambo. The narrator said Rimbod.

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