Hip Hop Reader, The, a Longman Topics Reader
Autor Tim Strode, Tim Wooden Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 feb 2007
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780321385123
ISBN-10: 0321385128
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 140 x 212 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Pearson Education
Locul publicării:Boston, United States
ISBN-10: 0321385128
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 140 x 212 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Pearson Education
Locul publicării:Boston, United States
Descriere
Composition and hip hop may seem unrelated, but the connection isn’t hard to make: Hip hop and rap rely on a complex of narrative practices that have clear ties to some of the best American essay writing. A Hip Hop Reader brings together work by important writers about this cultural phenomenon and provides lively selections that represent a variety of styles and interests.
Cuprins
1. Back in the Day: Origins and Definitions of Hip Hop
Cheryl L. Keyes, “The Roots and Stylistic Foundations of the Rap Music Tradition”
Tricia Rose, “Rap Music”
Juan Flores, “Puerto Rican and Proud, Boyee!: Rap Roots and Amnesia”
Sasha Frere Jones, “Ghost’s World: A Wu Tang Member’s New Album”
Shana, Kent “Illmatic: A Journey Into Nas’s State of Mind” (student essay)
2. Crossing the Color Line: Hip Hop Negotiates the Complexities of Race
N.R. Kleinfield, “Guarding the Borders of the Hip-Hop Nation”
Mark Anthony Neal, “Sold Out on Soul: The Corporate Annexation of Black Popular Music”
David R. Rodiger, “Elvis, Wiggers, and Crossing Over to Nonwhiteness”
Michel Marriott, “Rap’s Embrace of ‘Nigger’ Fires Bitter Debate”
Touré, “The Hip-Hop Nation: Whose Is It? In the End Black Men Must Lead.”
3. Your Momma’s a Mack Daddy: Gender Construction in Hip Hop
Marcyliena Morgan, “Hip-Hop Women Shredding the Veil: Race and Class in Popular Feminist Identity”
Kimberle Crenshaw, “Beyond Racism and Misogyny: Black Feminism and 2 Live Crew”
Michele Wallace, “When Black Feminism Faces the Music and the Music Is Rap”
Imani Perry, “The Venus Hip Hop and the Pink Ghetto: Negotiating Spaces for Women”
bell hooks, “The Coolness of Being Real”
4. Growing Up Gangsta: Gangsta Rap and the Politics of Identity
Elizabeth Grant, “Gangsta Rap, the War on Drugs, and the Location of African-American Identity in Los Angeles 1988-92”
Michael Eric Dyson, “Gangsta Rap and American Culture”
John Pareles, “Should Ice Cube’s Voice Be Chilled?”
bell hooks, “Gangsta Culture”
5. Mapping Rap: East Coast, West Coast, Third Coast, and Beyond
Murray Forman, “‘Represent’: Race, Space and Place in Rap Music”
Ayanna Parris, “Reaching Toward Hip-Hop’s Homeland: Hip Hop in Tanzania” (student essay)
Kelefa Sanneh, “New Orleans Hip Hop is the Home of Gangsta Gumbo”
Kiese Laymon, “Hip Hop Stole My Black Boy”
Cheryl L. Keyes, “The Roots and Stylistic Foundations of the Rap Music Tradition”
Tricia Rose, “Rap Music”
Juan Flores, “Puerto Rican and Proud, Boyee!: Rap Roots and Amnesia”
Sasha Frere Jones, “Ghost’s World: A Wu Tang Member’s New Album”
Shana, Kent “Illmatic: A Journey Into Nas’s State of Mind” (student essay)
2. Crossing the Color Line: Hip Hop Negotiates the Complexities of Race
N.R. Kleinfield, “Guarding the Borders of the Hip-Hop Nation”
Mark Anthony Neal, “Sold Out on Soul: The Corporate Annexation of Black Popular Music”
David R. Rodiger, “Elvis, Wiggers, and Crossing Over to Nonwhiteness”
Michel Marriott, “Rap’s Embrace of ‘Nigger’ Fires Bitter Debate”
Touré, “The Hip-Hop Nation: Whose Is It? In the End Black Men Must Lead.”
3. Your Momma’s a Mack Daddy: Gender Construction in Hip Hop
Marcyliena Morgan, “Hip-Hop Women Shredding the Veil: Race and Class in Popular Feminist Identity”
Kimberle Crenshaw, “Beyond Racism and Misogyny: Black Feminism and 2 Live Crew”
Michele Wallace, “When Black Feminism Faces the Music and the Music Is Rap”
Imani Perry, “The Venus Hip Hop and the Pink Ghetto: Negotiating Spaces for Women”
bell hooks, “The Coolness of Being Real”
4. Growing Up Gangsta: Gangsta Rap and the Politics of Identity
Elizabeth Grant, “Gangsta Rap, the War on Drugs, and the Location of African-American Identity in Los Angeles 1988-92”
Michael Eric Dyson, “Gangsta Rap and American Culture”
John Pareles, “Should Ice Cube’s Voice Be Chilled?”
bell hooks, “Gangsta Culture”
5. Mapping Rap: East Coast, West Coast, Third Coast, and Beyond
Murray Forman, “‘Represent’: Race, Space and Place in Rap Music”
Ayanna Parris, “Reaching Toward Hip-Hop’s Homeland: Hip Hop in Tanzania” (student essay)
Kelefa Sanneh, “New Orleans Hip Hop is the Home of Gangsta Gumbo”
Kiese Laymon, “Hip Hop Stole My Black Boy”
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Tim Strode - Tim Wood
The Hip Hop Reader
LONGMAN TOPICS are brief, thought-provoking readers, each on a single complex, but compelling, topic. Featuring about 30 full-length selections, these volumes are generally half the size and half the cost of standard composition readers.
Hip hop and composition may seem unrelated, but the connection isn't hard to make: Hip hop and rap rely on a complex of narrative practices that have clear ties to some of the best American essay writing. The Hip Hop Reader brings together work by important writers about this cultural phenomenon and provides lively selections that represent a variety of styles and interests.
Notable Features of The Hip Hop Reader
The Hip Hop Reader
LONGMAN TOPICS are brief, thought-provoking readers, each on a single complex, but compelling, topic. Featuring about 30 full-length selections, these volumes are generally half the size and half the cost of standard composition readers.
Hip hop and composition may seem unrelated, but the connection isn't hard to make: Hip hop and rap rely on a complex of narrative practices that have clear ties to some of the best American essay writing. The Hip Hop Reader brings together work by important writers about this cultural phenomenon and provides lively selections that represent a variety of styles and interests.
Notable Features of The Hip Hop Reader
- Examples of writing in a range of genres--scholarly essays, journalistic pieces, album reviews, student writing, and more-illustrate various rhetorical models in each chapter.
- Chapters are organized around compelling issues such as race, gender, hip hop's global roots, and hip hop's political implications.
- A diverse array of writers, including mainstream critics like Sasha Frere Jones, Jon Pareles, and Kelefa Sanneh and scholars like bell hooks and Tricia Rose, explore a range of experiences and opinions
Caracteristici
- Examples of writing in a range of genres—scholarly essays, journalistic pieces, album reviews, student writing, and more—illustrate various rhetorical models in each chapter.
- Chapters are organized around cogent issues including race, gender, the political implications of hip hop, and its commodification and role in globalization.
- A diverse array of writers represent a wide range of experiences and opinions, from mainstream critics to scholars to rap and hip hop artists themselves.