Why Bob Dylan Matters

Location: Tinkham Veale University Center, Ballroom C, 11038 Bellflower Road

 

Harvard Classics Professor, teacher since 2004 of the freshman seminar, “Bob Dylan”, and celebrated ‘Dylanologist’ Richard F. Thomas makes a compelling case for why the music and lyrics of Bob Dylan endure and inspire us.  Thomas discusses his new book Why Bob Dylan Matters with MacArthur Fellow and fellow Dylanologist Thomas Palaima and Professor Daniel Goldmark, Director of ǿմý’s Center for Popular Music Studies. 

This event is co-sponsored by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Library and Archives and the ǿմý Center for Popular Music Studies.

Book sale and signing will immediately follow the lecture.

Free and open to the public. 


About the speaker:

Richard F. Thomas

Richard F. Thomas, George Martin Lane Professor of the Classics, was born in London and brought up in New Zealand. He was educated at the University of Auckland (B.A. 1972; M.A. 1973), and at the University of Michigan (Ph.D. 1977).

His publications include a monograph Lands and Peoples in Roman Poetry: The Ethnographical Tradition (Cambridge 1982), a two-volume text and commentary on  (Cambridge 1988); a collection of his articles on the subject of Virgilian intertextuality,  (Michigan 1999); a study of the ideological reception of Virgil from its beginnings through the twentieth century,  (Cambridge 2001) and two co-edited books to which he also contributed: with Charles Martindale,  (Blackwell 2006); with Catharine Mason the co-edited online volume, , (Oral Tradition 22.1 2007); a commentary on  (Cambridge 2011); co-edited with Jan Ziolkowski, a three-volume  (Wiley-Blackwell 2014); and Why Bob Dylan Matters (Dey Street Books 2017). He also co-edited and contributed to Widener Library: Voices from the Stacks, a special issue of Harvard Library Bulletin (Cambridge, MA 1996). He has published articles, notes and reviews on Hellenistic Greek poetry, on Roman poetry, particularly of the Republican and Augustan periods, on Tacitus, on the reception of Classical literature, and on the lyrics of Bob Dylan. For further details, see .

He is interested in a variety of critical approaches (chiefly philological, intertextual, narratological, reception poetics), and in literary history, metrics and prose stylistics (particularly Tacitus), genre studies, translation theory and practice, the reception of Classical literature and culture, particularly with respect to Virgil, Bob Dylan.

He has served as the Director of Undergraduate Studies, Director of Graduate Studies, and Department Chair in the Department of the Classics. He is Co-chair of the Seminar on “,” in Harvard’s Mahindra Humanities Center. He has served as Director of the American Philological Association and as Trustee, Director, and President of the . Since 2001, he has been a Trustee of the , and is currently serving as Editor of Harvard Studies in Classical Philology.