New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd wrote yesterday that Bob Dylan had sold out in China when he was there recently for the first time, by not singing some of his most famous protest songs from the 60s like “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “The Times They Are a-Changin’,” because he did not want to offend the Chinese authorities.
Under the headline “Blowin’ In The Idiot Wind,” Dowd wrote that Dylan should have done that, especially now, during the current wave of violations against human rights in China.
Dowd’s article has, as expected, caused much debate among both Dylan fans both here in America, and among Western journalists and Chinese living and working in China, according to the China expert at The Atlantic, James Fallows. On his blog, Fallows writes about how both his Chinese and Western friends are upset and angry with Dowd.
One of them asks, do you really think that the Chinese were pleased that Dylan sang “My Way of Thinking” with this verse?
“So much oppression
Can’t keep track of it no more”
Those who have critiziced Dowd’s column have a point, writes Fallows. At a minimum, he writes, it is not clear cut that Dylan sold out to be able to come and sing in China.