Teaching Comparative Government and Politics

Sunday, April 04, 2010

Fearing artistic license

China fears an old man who is neither Confucius nor Mao Zedong.

China blocks Bob Dylan gigs
Aged 68 and almost half a century past the zenith of his angry, protest-song youth, Bob Dylan must almost have forgotten what it was like to be deemed a threat to society. But it seems at least one place still sees him as a dangerous radical.

Dylan's planned tour of east Asia later this month has been called off after Chinese officials refused permission for him to play in Beijing and Shanghai, his local promoters said. China's ministry of culture, which vets planned concerts by overseas artists, appeared wary of Dylan's past as an icon of the counterculture movement, said Jeffrey Wu, of the Taiwan-based promoters Brokers Brothers Herald.

Dylan fans denied the chance to see their hero might also blame Björk, who caused consternation among Chinese officials two years ago by shouting pro-Tibet slogans at a concert in Shanghai, Wu told Hong Kong's South China Morning Post...

Teaching Comparative blog entries are indexed.

Find out What You Need to Know


Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home