INDEX

The index that appeared in the print version of this title was intentionally removed from the eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below

“A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” (song)

American Dream

and advertising

and Dylan’s perspective

and the middle-class

and nostalgia. see United States

Another Side of Bob Dylan (album)

Apple (corporation)

and iTunes

Baez, Joan

relationship with Dylan

“Ballad in Plain D” (song)

The Basement Tapes (album)

The Beatles

“Beyond Here Lies Nothin’ ” (song)

Biograph (album)

Blanchett, Cate. see I’m Not There (film)

Blonde on Blonde (album)

Blood on the Tracks (album)

Bloomfield, Mike

“Blowin’ in the Wind” (song)

criticism of

and symbolism

Bob Dylan (album)

BobDylan.com

Bringing It All Back Home (album)

Browne, Ray B.

Cash, Johnny

Chronicles: Volume One (memoir)

Civil Rights Movement

Columbia Records. see Bob Dylan (album); Hammond, John

Dean, James

“Dinkytown,” Minnesota

Dont Look Back (film)

“Drifter’s Escape” (song)

Dylan, Bob: awards and honors

background

Christian music

as a commodity

and destiny

determination

early years

and fame

fear of death

and folk music

influence

and marketing

motorcycle accident

move to rock music

and musical style

as a mythical figure

overview of career

and performing

and postmodernism

and privacy

and social media

as a songwriter

as spokesman of a generation. see New York City; Symbolic interactionism

Folk music: popularity in 1960s

as protest music

The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan (album)

Ginsberg, Allen

Greenwich Village

and folk music

reaction to Dylan’s move to rock

Grossman, Al

Guthrie, Woody

Dylan imitates

friendship with Dylan

Hammond, John

and marketing

Hibbing, Minnesota

Highway 61 Revisited (album)

“If You See Her, Say Hello” (song)

I’m Not There (film)

“It Ain’t Me, Babe” (song)

“It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue” (song)

“I Want You” (song)

Johnson, Lyndon B., and the Great Society

John Wesley Harding (album)

“Just Like a Woman” (song)

King Jr., Martin Luther

Kooper, Al

“Like a Rolling Stone” (song)

and the American Dream

anthem

popularity

“Love and Theft” (album)

and plagiarism controversy

Maimudes, Victor

Marketing. see Dylan, Bob: marketing; Technology

Masked & Anonymous (film)

Modern Times (album)

MTV Unplugged (album)

Music Television (MTV)

1960s

and chaos

revolutionary versus conservative thinking

Nashville Skyline (album)

New Morning (album)

New York City

and early ambitions. see Greenwich Village

New York World’s Fair (1965)

No Direction Home (film)

“North Country Blues” (song)

“Not Dark Yet” (song)

Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (film)

Pennebaker, D. A. see Dont Look Back (film)

Peter, Paul, and Mary (folk trio), covering Dylan’s songs

“Positively 4th Street” (song)

Presley, Elvis

Robertson, Robbie

Rolfzen, B. J.

The Rolling Stones

Rotolo, Suze

inspiration for songs

Sandburg, Carl

Saved (album)

Self Portrait (album)

Semiotics

Shot of Love (album)

Sigma Alpha Mu

Dylan participation in

Slow Train Coming (album)

“Song to Woody” (song)

Springsteen, Bruce

Street-Legal (album)

“Subterranean Homesick Blues” (song)

Sullivan, Ed

Symbolic interactionism: and symbolism

in understanding Dylan

Technology

and music industry

Tempest (album)

“Theme Time Radio Hour” (radio show)

“Things Have Changed” (song)

Time Out of Mind (album)

and career trajectory

The Times They Are A-Changin’ (album)

Together Through Life (album)

Traveling Wilburys (group)

United States: and consumer culture

1960s

1970s

1980s. see American Dream

University of Minnesota

Vee, Bobby

Vietnam War

and Marines

Wells, Mary

Wonder Boys (film)

Youth: and college education

and 1960s culture

Zimmerman, Abe (father)

and middle-class lifestyle

Zimmerman, Beatty (mother)

and music

Zimmerman, Robert Allen. see Bob Dylan