Question for men about early Bob Dylan songs?!


Question:

Question for men about early Bob Dylan songs?

1.) If the following songs have correlation to your life, experiences, or others you've known, how so and in what instances?

-Positively 4th Street
-It Ain't Me Babe
-Like a Rolling Stone
-Just Like a Woman

2.) Are the songs harmlessly about male commiseration and travails with women, or are they hurtfully un-politically-correct in today's era? Do they have any use or application?

3.) If someone does think the songs have useful application today, does this make that person a misogynist?

Sorry for the alarmist prose, but a since-deleted (by me) question I asked yesterday about the relevance of these songs for men brought female accusations of misogyny toward me. That miscommunication or misunderstanding has made me feel quite awful about myself since; this is simply a clarification of what I was meaning.

Thank you.


Answers:

Why beat yourself up? Dylan's music and poetry is dated but accurate for the times. Are the writings of Homer politically incorrect or just written from a different time. Each of those songs has significance. Different for each person that listens to them. So no, not misogynistic. Not anti- feminist. Just poetry. Do you see the trend? Censor the arts because it upsets a special interest group,, whether it be men, women, pick a race, animal rights people or whatever. If you like it, listen to it. If you don't, don't listen. Aren't you tired of others telling you what to say, listen to or read.


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