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Bob Dylan has been accused of borrowing heavily for part of the Nobel Literature Prize lecture he finally delivered to the Swedish Academy last week.
The singer-songwriter's remarks on how the book Moby Dick influenced him bear a close similarity to the SparkNotes summaries of the Herman Melville classic novel, according to an analysis on Slate.com.
SparkNotes.com provides study guides for students in literature and other fields.
They included lines from Dylan's online lecture such as "Ahab's got a wife and child back in Nantucket that he reminisces about now and then."
The entry from SparkNotes reads "musing on his wife and child back in Nantucket," Pitzer noted.
Dylan's representatives did not return calls for comment on 14 June.
In a 2012 interview with Rolling Stone magazine, he brushed aside criticism that he plagiarised the work of other artists by saying: "It's called songwriting. It has to do with melody and rhythm, and then after that, anything goes. You make everything yours. We all do it."
He chose not to attend the annual ceremony and banquet in Stockholm.
"If the Moby Dick portion of his Nobel lecture was indeed cribbed from SparkNotes, then what is the world to make of it? Perhaps the use of SparkNotes can be seen as a sendup of the prestige-prize economy," said Pitzer.
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