[Editor's Note: As I am facing numerous writing deadlines over the
second half of February, this seems like a good time to give a
retrospective glance to the first two years of Art of the Rural.
Over these weeks I will feature a few new articles, but also many
favorites from the archives. Thanks again to everyone who has read and
contributed; what began as a labor of love has become a project far
larger, and far more rewarding, than I ever could have anticipated - and
I deeply appreciate the readership and participation of such a diverse
audience. In March we will offer new articles and series, and share some
new projects related to our mission.
Bob Dylan's Direction Home was originally published on January 25, 2011. His summer tour did not travel through Minnesota.]
**********
**********
City’s just a jungle, more games to play
Trapped in the heart of it, trying to get away.
I was raised in the country, I been working in the town
I been in trouble ever since I set my suitcase down.
Trapped in the heart of it, trying to get away.
I was raised in the country, I been working in the town
I been in trouble ever since I set my suitcase down.
--from "Mississippi"
Last week Aaron, a reader from Ohio, passed along some very interesting news. It appears that Duluth, Minnesota,
Bob Dylan's birthplace, is actively working to bring back their
estranged native son for a concert on his 70th birthday. The news of
these plans has been documented in forums on the encyclopedic Dylan
resource Expecting Rain, and was confirmed last month in the Duluth News Tribune,
where John Ziegler reported that city officials are currently in talks
with Dylan and his management to bring him back to Minnesota on or
around his May 24th birthday.
As
with all things Bob Dylan, this story contains a good deal of rumor and
apocrypha. For instance, I heard that the small mining town of Hibbing, Minnesota,
Dylan's hometown, had originally sought to welcome the musician back on
his 70th birthday (Aaron tells me that Dylan last visited for his
ten-year high school reunion, where he was roundly ignored by his former
classmates), yet Mr. Ziegler reports that Duluth had extended their
invitation a full year ahead of schedule, contacting him on his 69th
birthday. Regardless, if Dylan accepts this invitation we will see a
great deal of media attention focused on his rural Minnesota roots.
While there may be a nostalgic whiff to such reflections, it is
significant to think of Dylan-the-70-year-old back in Minnesota, over
four decades after he recorded his generation-defining howl of "no direction home".
If
we put that song--and the long-view of Dylan's legacy--in perspective,
then what could also come out of such a birthday in Minnesota could be a
reappraisal of a whole generation's relationship to rural place. While
Dylan did his best to shirk his "voice of a generation" status, it's
clear that his life narrative, captured so eloquently in "Mississippi,"
is representative of many of his fellow baby boomers: that first wave of
the "rural-brain drain," many of whom would later take part in the
flight out of America's urban centers and into a suburban life where
rolling stones meet their cul-de-sac.
However,
Dylan's last handful of records have embraced the traditional forms of
blues and country music just as baby boomers are returning to facets of
their own rural upbringing. While the local and organic food phenomenon
is part and parcel of this generational trend, many are realizing (as Wendell Berry did so many years ago, in his essay "A Native Hill") that you can
go home again. In my own home region this has been occurring for a few
years, as baby-boomers begin to form organizations to preserve our small
Ohio Valley town--and to hopefully bring it back to some semblance of
its former self.
Beyond this, the issue becomes one of what "homecoming" means, and how the rural diaspora negotiates this return. As this teenager's video
from Hibbing suggests, life never stopped in these communities, and
those who stayed both welcome and resent the influence of those who
left.
We'll
be following the events surrounding this birthday concert; until then,
here's a short video produced by the University of Minnesota in
conjunction with the UM Press's release of Highway 61 Revisited: Bob Dylan's Road from Minnesota to the World, edited by Colleen J. Sheehy and Thomas Swiss: