
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Perry offers detailed readings of the lyrics of many hip hop artists, including Ice Cube, Public Enemy, De La Soul, krs-One, OutKast, Sean "Puffy" Combs, Tupac Shakur, Lil' Kim, Biggie Smalls, Nas, Method Man, and Lauryn Hill. She focuses on the cultural foundations of the music and on the form and narrative features of the songs—the call and response, the reliance on the break, the use of metaphor, and the recurring figures of the trickster and the outlaw. Perry also provides complex considerations of hip hop's association with crime, violence, and misogyny. She shows that while its message may be disconcerting, rap often expresses brilliant insights about existence in a society mired in difficult racial and gender politics. Hip hop, she suggests, airs a much wider, more troubling range of black experience than was projected during the civil rights era. It provides a unique public space where the sacred and the profane impulses within African American culture unite.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Hip Hop’s Mama: Originalism and Identity in the Music
- 2. My Mic Sound Nice: Art, Community, and Consciousness
- 3. Stinging Like Tabasco: Structure and Format in Hip Hop Compositions
- 4. The Glorious Outlaw: Hip Hop Narratives, American Law, and the Court of Public Opinion
- 5. B-Boys, Players, and Preachers: Reading Masculinity
- 6. The Venus Hip Hop and the Pink Ghetto: Negotiating Spaces for Women
- 7. Bling Bling . . . and Going Pop: Consumerism and Co-optation in Hip Hop
- Notes
- Index