The Bloomsbury Handbook of Hip Hop Pedagogy
Herausgeber: Kelly, Lauren Leigh; Graves, Daren
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Hip Hop Pedagogy
Herausgeber: Kelly, Lauren Leigh; Graves, Daren
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The Bloomsbury Handbook of Hip Hop Pedagogy is the first reference work to cover the theory, history, research methodologies, and practice of Hip Hop pedagogy. Including 20 chapters from activist-oriented and community engaged scholars, the handbook provides perspectives and studies from across the world, including Brazil, the Caribbean, Scandinavia, and the USA. Organized into four topical sections focusing on the history and cultural roots of Hip Hop; theories and research methods in Hip Hop pedagogy; and Hip Hop pedagogy in practice, the handbook offers theoretical, analytical, and…mehr
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The Bloomsbury Handbook of Hip Hop Pedagogy is the first reference work to cover the theory, history, research methodologies, and practice of Hip Hop pedagogy. Including 20 chapters from activist-oriented and community engaged scholars, the handbook provides perspectives and studies from across the world, including Brazil, the Caribbean, Scandinavia, and the USA. Organized into four topical sections focusing on the history and cultural roots of Hip Hop; theories and research methods in Hip Hop pedagogy; and Hip Hop pedagogy in practice, the handbook offers theoretical, analytical, and pedagogical insights emerging across sociology, literacy, school counselling and youth organizing. The chapters reflect the impact of critical Hip Hop pedagogies and Hip Hop-based research for educators and scholars interested in radical, transformative approaches to education. Ultimately, the many voices included in the handbook show that Hip Hop pedagogy is a humanizing and emancipatory approach which is redefining the purposes and practices of education.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 176mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 768g
- ISBN-13: 9781350331815
- ISBN-10: 1350331813
- Artikelnr.: 67786090
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Academic
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Februar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 176mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 768g
- ISBN-13: 9781350331815
- ISBN-10: 1350331813
- Artikelnr.: 67786090
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Lauren Leigh Kelly is Associate Professor of English Education and Urban Social Justice Teacher Education at Rutgers University, USA. Daren Graves is Professor of Education and Social Work at Simmons University, USA, and Adjunct Lecturer of Education at Harvard University, USA.
Foreword
Dave Stovall (University of Illinois- Chicago
USA) Introduction
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Daren Graves (Simmons University
USA) Session I: Roots and Routes of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side A Interlude: The Hip Hop Summer School
Mikal Lee (Brooklyn Academy of Music
USA) 1. Revolutionary Youth Culture: A Brief History of Hip Hop for Educators
Michael B. Lipset (McGill University
High School for Recording Arts and 4 Learning
Canada) & David "TC" Ellis (High School for Recording Arts
Studio 4
4 Learning
Canada) 2. The Breaks
Authentic Archives and the OG Algorithm: The DJ as The Connective Healer and Curatorial Cornerstone - A Selected Experience
Todd Craig (City University of New York (CUNY)
USA) 3. Aumente o Volume: Community Pedagogies of Rap Music in Brazil
Cuba
and Haiti
Charlie D. Hankin (Colby College
USA) 4. An Overview of Pedagogies and Perspectives on Hip Hop Education
Kelly R. Allen (Augusta University
USA) Session II: Theories of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side B Interlude: The Team is Crucial
Find Your People
Vera Naputi (Mukwonago Area School District
USA) 5. "How You Gon' Win When You Ain't Right Within?": Hip Hop Pedagogy and Racial Healing
Jamila Lyiscott (University of Massachusetts
USA) 6. Reading the World with Black Girls: Journeying to Human Rights via Liberatory Pedagogy
Elaine Richardson (The Ohio State University
USA) 7. "There's Levels to This Sh*t!": Contributions
Additive
Transformative
and Social Action Approaches to Hip Hop Content Integration
H. Bernard Hall (Drexel University
USA) 8. Hip Hop Development Theory within Hip Hop Praxis Pedagogy
P. Thandi Hicks Harper (Youth Popular Culture Institute
Inc.
USA) 9. A Hip Hop Pedagogy Framework for the Advancement of Science Education
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA) 10. Teaching as a Way of Life - On Hip Hop as the Essence of Nordic Bildung
Johan Soderman (University of Gothenburg
Sweden) Session III: Research Methods in Hip Hop Pedagogy Side C Interlude: Methodologies of Authenticity in Hip Hop Based Research
Tasha Iglesias (Hip Hop Association of Advancement and Education
USA) 11. Thinking with Hip Hop Sound: Aesthetics in Research Methods
Emery Petchauer (Michigan State University
USA) 12. Towards Hip Hop Informed Research Methodologies
Ian Levy (Manhattan College
USA)
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA)
and Brian Mooney
(Fairleigh Dickinson University
USA) 13. Blackout Poetic Transcription: A Decolonial Hip Hop Method for Qualitative Research
Tony Keith Jr. (Ed Emcee Academy
DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities
USA) 14. When I Tell My Story: Exploring Hip Hop Education as a Culturally Responsive Teaching Tool Within K-12 Schools
Naomi Filipiak
(Brown University
USA) Session IV: The Practice of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side D Interlude: Reflections
Connections
and Directions: A Hip Hop Educator Memoir
Timothy Jones (Hip Hop Ed
Inc.
USA) 15. The Beauty of Black Literacies: Liberated (Re)memberings of Black Heritage through Hip Hop Curriculum
Bianca Nightengale Lee (Florida Atlantic University
USA) 16. "The Main Ingredient": Building Learning Communities through Trust
Love
and Collaboration
Semaj Eric Skillings (University of Connecticut
USA) 17. Hip Hop as "Artivism" in the Anti-Black City of São Paulo
Brazil
Derek Pardue (Aarhus University
Denmark)
Cristiane Correia Dias "B-Girl Cris" (University of São Paulo
Brazil) and Nany Vieira (University of São Paulo
Brazil) 18. Living Hip Hop: The Community-based Organization as a Space for Educational Liberation
Ijeoma Ononuju (Touro University of California
USA)
Shaun de Vera
(California State University
Sacramento
USA) and Vajra Watson (California State University
Sacramento
USA) 19. "When Keeping It Real Goes Wrong": Enacting Critical Pedagogies of Hip Hop in Mainstream Schools
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Don C. Sawyer III (Quinnipiac University
USA) 20. Hip Hop Mentality: Empowering Teachers to Develop a Mindset to Recognize Hip Hop and Youth Culture as an Asset to the School Community
John Robinson (Ohio University
USA) and Jason Rawls (Ohio University
USA) Outro: A Call to Teachers and Researchers from a Young Scholar
Hector Cruz (Fordham University
USA) Index
Dave Stovall (University of Illinois- Chicago
USA) Introduction
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Daren Graves (Simmons University
USA) Session I: Roots and Routes of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side A Interlude: The Hip Hop Summer School
Mikal Lee (Brooklyn Academy of Music
USA) 1. Revolutionary Youth Culture: A Brief History of Hip Hop for Educators
Michael B. Lipset (McGill University
High School for Recording Arts and 4 Learning
Canada) & David "TC" Ellis (High School for Recording Arts
Studio 4
4 Learning
Canada) 2. The Breaks
Authentic Archives and the OG Algorithm: The DJ as The Connective Healer and Curatorial Cornerstone - A Selected Experience
Todd Craig (City University of New York (CUNY)
USA) 3. Aumente o Volume: Community Pedagogies of Rap Music in Brazil
Cuba
and Haiti
Charlie D. Hankin (Colby College
USA) 4. An Overview of Pedagogies and Perspectives on Hip Hop Education
Kelly R. Allen (Augusta University
USA) Session II: Theories of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side B Interlude: The Team is Crucial
Find Your People
Vera Naputi (Mukwonago Area School District
USA) 5. "How You Gon' Win When You Ain't Right Within?": Hip Hop Pedagogy and Racial Healing
Jamila Lyiscott (University of Massachusetts
USA) 6. Reading the World with Black Girls: Journeying to Human Rights via Liberatory Pedagogy
Elaine Richardson (The Ohio State University
USA) 7. "There's Levels to This Sh*t!": Contributions
Additive
Transformative
and Social Action Approaches to Hip Hop Content Integration
H. Bernard Hall (Drexel University
USA) 8. Hip Hop Development Theory within Hip Hop Praxis Pedagogy
P. Thandi Hicks Harper (Youth Popular Culture Institute
Inc.
USA) 9. A Hip Hop Pedagogy Framework for the Advancement of Science Education
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA) 10. Teaching as a Way of Life - On Hip Hop as the Essence of Nordic Bildung
Johan Soderman (University of Gothenburg
Sweden) Session III: Research Methods in Hip Hop Pedagogy Side C Interlude: Methodologies of Authenticity in Hip Hop Based Research
Tasha Iglesias (Hip Hop Association of Advancement and Education
USA) 11. Thinking with Hip Hop Sound: Aesthetics in Research Methods
Emery Petchauer (Michigan State University
USA) 12. Towards Hip Hop Informed Research Methodologies
Ian Levy (Manhattan College
USA)
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA)
and Brian Mooney
(Fairleigh Dickinson University
USA) 13. Blackout Poetic Transcription: A Decolonial Hip Hop Method for Qualitative Research
Tony Keith Jr. (Ed Emcee Academy
DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities
USA) 14. When I Tell My Story: Exploring Hip Hop Education as a Culturally Responsive Teaching Tool Within K-12 Schools
Naomi Filipiak
(Brown University
USA) Session IV: The Practice of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side D Interlude: Reflections
Connections
and Directions: A Hip Hop Educator Memoir
Timothy Jones (Hip Hop Ed
Inc.
USA) 15. The Beauty of Black Literacies: Liberated (Re)memberings of Black Heritage through Hip Hop Curriculum
Bianca Nightengale Lee (Florida Atlantic University
USA) 16. "The Main Ingredient": Building Learning Communities through Trust
Love
and Collaboration
Semaj Eric Skillings (University of Connecticut
USA) 17. Hip Hop as "Artivism" in the Anti-Black City of São Paulo
Brazil
Derek Pardue (Aarhus University
Denmark)
Cristiane Correia Dias "B-Girl Cris" (University of São Paulo
Brazil) and Nany Vieira (University of São Paulo
Brazil) 18. Living Hip Hop: The Community-based Organization as a Space for Educational Liberation
Ijeoma Ononuju (Touro University of California
USA)
Shaun de Vera
(California State University
Sacramento
USA) and Vajra Watson (California State University
Sacramento
USA) 19. "When Keeping It Real Goes Wrong": Enacting Critical Pedagogies of Hip Hop in Mainstream Schools
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Don C. Sawyer III (Quinnipiac University
USA) 20. Hip Hop Mentality: Empowering Teachers to Develop a Mindset to Recognize Hip Hop and Youth Culture as an Asset to the School Community
John Robinson (Ohio University
USA) and Jason Rawls (Ohio University
USA) Outro: A Call to Teachers and Researchers from a Young Scholar
Hector Cruz (Fordham University
USA) Index
Foreword
Dave Stovall (University of Illinois- Chicago
USA) Introduction
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Daren Graves (Simmons University
USA) Session I: Roots and Routes of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side A Interlude: The Hip Hop Summer School
Mikal Lee (Brooklyn Academy of Music
USA) 1. Revolutionary Youth Culture: A Brief History of Hip Hop for Educators
Michael B. Lipset (McGill University
High School for Recording Arts and 4 Learning
Canada) & David "TC" Ellis (High School for Recording Arts
Studio 4
4 Learning
Canada) 2. The Breaks
Authentic Archives and the OG Algorithm: The DJ as The Connective Healer and Curatorial Cornerstone - A Selected Experience
Todd Craig (City University of New York (CUNY)
USA) 3. Aumente o Volume: Community Pedagogies of Rap Music in Brazil
Cuba
and Haiti
Charlie D. Hankin (Colby College
USA) 4. An Overview of Pedagogies and Perspectives on Hip Hop Education
Kelly R. Allen (Augusta University
USA) Session II: Theories of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side B Interlude: The Team is Crucial
Find Your People
Vera Naputi (Mukwonago Area School District
USA) 5. "How You Gon' Win When You Ain't Right Within?": Hip Hop Pedagogy and Racial Healing
Jamila Lyiscott (University of Massachusetts
USA) 6. Reading the World with Black Girls: Journeying to Human Rights via Liberatory Pedagogy
Elaine Richardson (The Ohio State University
USA) 7. "There's Levels to This Sh*t!": Contributions
Additive
Transformative
and Social Action Approaches to Hip Hop Content Integration
H. Bernard Hall (Drexel University
USA) 8. Hip Hop Development Theory within Hip Hop Praxis Pedagogy
P. Thandi Hicks Harper (Youth Popular Culture Institute
Inc.
USA) 9. A Hip Hop Pedagogy Framework for the Advancement of Science Education
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA) 10. Teaching as a Way of Life - On Hip Hop as the Essence of Nordic Bildung
Johan Soderman (University of Gothenburg
Sweden) Session III: Research Methods in Hip Hop Pedagogy Side C Interlude: Methodologies of Authenticity in Hip Hop Based Research
Tasha Iglesias (Hip Hop Association of Advancement and Education
USA) 11. Thinking with Hip Hop Sound: Aesthetics in Research Methods
Emery Petchauer (Michigan State University
USA) 12. Towards Hip Hop Informed Research Methodologies
Ian Levy (Manhattan College
USA)
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA)
and Brian Mooney
(Fairleigh Dickinson University
USA) 13. Blackout Poetic Transcription: A Decolonial Hip Hop Method for Qualitative Research
Tony Keith Jr. (Ed Emcee Academy
DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities
USA) 14. When I Tell My Story: Exploring Hip Hop Education as a Culturally Responsive Teaching Tool Within K-12 Schools
Naomi Filipiak
(Brown University
USA) Session IV: The Practice of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side D Interlude: Reflections
Connections
and Directions: A Hip Hop Educator Memoir
Timothy Jones (Hip Hop Ed
Inc.
USA) 15. The Beauty of Black Literacies: Liberated (Re)memberings of Black Heritage through Hip Hop Curriculum
Bianca Nightengale Lee (Florida Atlantic University
USA) 16. "The Main Ingredient": Building Learning Communities through Trust
Love
and Collaboration
Semaj Eric Skillings (University of Connecticut
USA) 17. Hip Hop as "Artivism" in the Anti-Black City of São Paulo
Brazil
Derek Pardue (Aarhus University
Denmark)
Cristiane Correia Dias "B-Girl Cris" (University of São Paulo
Brazil) and Nany Vieira (University of São Paulo
Brazil) 18. Living Hip Hop: The Community-based Organization as a Space for Educational Liberation
Ijeoma Ononuju (Touro University of California
USA)
Shaun de Vera
(California State University
Sacramento
USA) and Vajra Watson (California State University
Sacramento
USA) 19. "When Keeping It Real Goes Wrong": Enacting Critical Pedagogies of Hip Hop in Mainstream Schools
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Don C. Sawyer III (Quinnipiac University
USA) 20. Hip Hop Mentality: Empowering Teachers to Develop a Mindset to Recognize Hip Hop and Youth Culture as an Asset to the School Community
John Robinson (Ohio University
USA) and Jason Rawls (Ohio University
USA) Outro: A Call to Teachers and Researchers from a Young Scholar
Hector Cruz (Fordham University
USA) Index
Dave Stovall (University of Illinois- Chicago
USA) Introduction
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Daren Graves (Simmons University
USA) Session I: Roots and Routes of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side A Interlude: The Hip Hop Summer School
Mikal Lee (Brooklyn Academy of Music
USA) 1. Revolutionary Youth Culture: A Brief History of Hip Hop for Educators
Michael B. Lipset (McGill University
High School for Recording Arts and 4 Learning
Canada) & David "TC" Ellis (High School for Recording Arts
Studio 4
4 Learning
Canada) 2. The Breaks
Authentic Archives and the OG Algorithm: The DJ as The Connective Healer and Curatorial Cornerstone - A Selected Experience
Todd Craig (City University of New York (CUNY)
USA) 3. Aumente o Volume: Community Pedagogies of Rap Music in Brazil
Cuba
and Haiti
Charlie D. Hankin (Colby College
USA) 4. An Overview of Pedagogies and Perspectives on Hip Hop Education
Kelly R. Allen (Augusta University
USA) Session II: Theories of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side B Interlude: The Team is Crucial
Find Your People
Vera Naputi (Mukwonago Area School District
USA) 5. "How You Gon' Win When You Ain't Right Within?": Hip Hop Pedagogy and Racial Healing
Jamila Lyiscott (University of Massachusetts
USA) 6. Reading the World with Black Girls: Journeying to Human Rights via Liberatory Pedagogy
Elaine Richardson (The Ohio State University
USA) 7. "There's Levels to This Sh*t!": Contributions
Additive
Transformative
and Social Action Approaches to Hip Hop Content Integration
H. Bernard Hall (Drexel University
USA) 8. Hip Hop Development Theory within Hip Hop Praxis Pedagogy
P. Thandi Hicks Harper (Youth Popular Culture Institute
Inc.
USA) 9. A Hip Hop Pedagogy Framework for the Advancement of Science Education
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA) 10. Teaching as a Way of Life - On Hip Hop as the Essence of Nordic Bildung
Johan Soderman (University of Gothenburg
Sweden) Session III: Research Methods in Hip Hop Pedagogy Side C Interlude: Methodologies of Authenticity in Hip Hop Based Research
Tasha Iglesias (Hip Hop Association of Advancement and Education
USA) 11. Thinking with Hip Hop Sound: Aesthetics in Research Methods
Emery Petchauer (Michigan State University
USA) 12. Towards Hip Hop Informed Research Methodologies
Ian Levy (Manhattan College
USA)
Edmund Adjapong (Seton Hall University
USA)
and Brian Mooney
(Fairleigh Dickinson University
USA) 13. Blackout Poetic Transcription: A Decolonial Hip Hop Method for Qualitative Research
Tony Keith Jr. (Ed Emcee Academy
DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities
USA) 14. When I Tell My Story: Exploring Hip Hop Education as a Culturally Responsive Teaching Tool Within K-12 Schools
Naomi Filipiak
(Brown University
USA) Session IV: The Practice of Hip Hop Pedagogy Side D Interlude: Reflections
Connections
and Directions: A Hip Hop Educator Memoir
Timothy Jones (Hip Hop Ed
Inc.
USA) 15. The Beauty of Black Literacies: Liberated (Re)memberings of Black Heritage through Hip Hop Curriculum
Bianca Nightengale Lee (Florida Atlantic University
USA) 16. "The Main Ingredient": Building Learning Communities through Trust
Love
and Collaboration
Semaj Eric Skillings (University of Connecticut
USA) 17. Hip Hop as "Artivism" in the Anti-Black City of São Paulo
Brazil
Derek Pardue (Aarhus University
Denmark)
Cristiane Correia Dias "B-Girl Cris" (University of São Paulo
Brazil) and Nany Vieira (University of São Paulo
Brazil) 18. Living Hip Hop: The Community-based Organization as a Space for Educational Liberation
Ijeoma Ononuju (Touro University of California
USA)
Shaun de Vera
(California State University
Sacramento
USA) and Vajra Watson (California State University
Sacramento
USA) 19. "When Keeping It Real Goes Wrong": Enacting Critical Pedagogies of Hip Hop in Mainstream Schools
Lauren Leigh Kelly (Rutgers University
USA) and Don C. Sawyer III (Quinnipiac University
USA) 20. Hip Hop Mentality: Empowering Teachers to Develop a Mindset to Recognize Hip Hop and Youth Culture as an Asset to the School Community
John Robinson (Ohio University
USA) and Jason Rawls (Ohio University
USA) Outro: A Call to Teachers and Researchers from a Young Scholar
Hector Cruz (Fordham University
USA) Index