Hip Hop Matters: Politics, Pop Culture, and the Struggle for the Soul of a MovementBeacon Press, 1 sie 2005 - 304 From its humble beginnings in the Bronx to its transformation into a multibillion-dollar global industry, hip hop has stirred constant and contentious debate. Avoiding the simple caricatures that either celebrate or condemn this powerful movement, S. Craig Watkins produces one of the most thorough accounts of hip hop yet. Hip Hop Matters delves deeply into the phenomenal world that hip hop has created and comes up with a portrait that is as big, brave, and vibrant as the movement itself. Readers see the brilliance and blemishes of hip hop's entrepreneurial elite and also discover a thriving digital underground, hip-hop inspired literature, young political activists, and the movement's own intelligentsia. Watkins punctuates this meticulously researched book with revealing anecdotes and astute analysis of the corporate takeover of hip hop, the culture's march into America's colleges and universities, and the rampant misogyny threatening hip hop's progressive potential. He also offers revealing portraits of some of hip hop's most intriguing personalities-Sylvia Robinson, Grandmaster Flash, Chuck D, Jay-Z, Hype Williams, and Eminem-and influential brands-FUBU and Def Jam. Ultimately, we see how the struggle for hip hop reverberates in a world bigger than hip hop: global media, racial and demographic change, the reinvention of the pop music industry, urban politics, the moral and public health of young people, and their relentless desire to be heard and respected. It is the spectacular convergence of these and other issues that makes hip hop one of the more compelling stories of our time. Which people and what forces are vying to control a movement that has become a lucrative pop culture industry as well as an insurgent voice for the young and the disenfranchised? Watkins's incisive and timely book decisively answers the question and shows why now, more than ever, hip hop matters. |
Spis treści
| 1 | |
| 9 | |
POP CULTURE and the STRUGGLE for HIP HOP | 31 |
Remixing American Pop | 33 |
A Great Year in Hip Hop | 55 |
Fear of a White Planet | 85 |
The Digital Underground | 111 |
POLITICS and the STRUGGLE for HIP HOP | 141 |
Our FutureRight Here Right Now | 187 |
We Love Hip Hop But Does Hip Hop Love Us? | 207 |
Artificial Intelligence? | 229 |
Bigger Than Hip Hop | 249 |
Acknowledgments | 257 |
NOTES | 261 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 279 |
| 283 | |
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Hip Hop Matters: Politics, Pop Culture, and the Struggle for the Soul of a ... Samuel Craig Watkins Ograniczony podgląd - 2005 |
Hip Hop Matters: Politics, Pop Culture, and the Struggle for the Soul of a ... S. Craig Watkins Ograniczony podgląd - 2006 |
Hip Hop Matters: Politics, Pop Culture, and the Struggle for the Soul of a ... S. Craig Watkins Podgląd niedostępny - 2006 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
activists album American pop artists Bambaataa became began believed Benzino Berklee biggest Billboard Billboard 200 black girls California campaign charts Chavis Muhammad Chuck Chuck D city's commercial corporate creative debut Def Jam Despite Detroit Eminem FUBU gangsta gangsta rap genre ghetto hard core hip hop matter hip hop's political hip-hop movement hip-hop music hop's HSAN Hype Ibid impact Internet Interscope interview Jay-Z juvenile justice Kilpatrick KRS-One Latino magazine mainstream major mayor music business music industry music video nation percent play pop culture pop music prison produced Public Enemy racial radio rap music rap's Rapper's Delight rappers reported rhymes Rolling Stone selling sexual Simmons song SoundScan state's street struggle for hip style success Sugar Hill Records tapes tion Tommy Boy Records turntables urban voice voters wanted women world of pop York young youth
