The author defends the philosophical value of underground hip-hop through illustrating how the culture significantly contributes to debates in multiple academic fields. She also examines the exclusion of hip-hop from discourses on knowledge, racism, genocide, and trauma as a reflection of the neoliberal sensibility that hip-hop exposes and opposes.
The author defends the philosophical value of underground hip-hop through illustrating how the culture significantly contributes to debates in multiple academic fields. She also examines the exclusion of hip-hop from discourses on knowledge, racism, genocide, and trauma as a reflection of the neoliberal sensibility that hip-hop exposes and opposes.
Lissa Skitolsky is the 2020-2021 Simon and Riva Spatz Visiting Chair in Jewish Studies at Dalhousie University.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: It's Bigger Than Hip-Hop Chapter One: Know What I'm Sayin? Chapter Two: Can I Get a Witness? Chapter Three: Claimin I'm a Criminal Chapter Four: But You Don't Hear Me Tho Chapter Five: You Feel Me? Chapter Six: Fuck Tha Police Conclusion: The Aesthetic Politics of Underground Hip-Hop Playlist by Chapter Discography
Introduction: It's Bigger Than Hip-Hop Chapter One: Know What I'm Sayin? Chapter Two: Can I Get a Witness? Chapter Three: Claimin I'm a Criminal Chapter Four: But You Don't Hear Me Tho Chapter Five: You Feel Me? Chapter Six: Fuck Tha Police Conclusion: The Aesthetic Politics of Underground Hip-Hop Playlist by Chapter Discography
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