This book brings together a range of hip hop scholars, artists and activists working on Hip Hop in the Global North and South with the goal of advancing Hiphopographic research as a critical methodology with critical fieldwork methods that can provide a critical perspective of our world. The authors’ focus in this volume is to present an anthology of essays that expand the remit of Hiphopography as an approach to the study of Hip Hop that is not only sensitive to the social, economic, political and cultural lives of Hip Hop Culture participants as interpreters and theorists, but one that continues to humanize the “whole person” behind the decks, on the mic, rocking on the linoleum floor, painting in front of a wall, and seeking that Knowledge of Self. This book will be relevant to Hip Hop scholars in fields such as cultural studies and history, sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology and ethnography, and race studies, while Hip Hop heads themselves will find parts of this book that represent their culture in ethical and informative ways.
Tabella dei contenuti
INTRODUCTION:Hip Hop’s here, there… and everywhere: An introduction to Global Hiphopography.-PART I – NOW CHECK THE METHOD.-CHAPTER 1:Public Enemy, public scholarship: Hiphopography and the co-production of knowledge with Chuck D.-CHAPTER 2:Rappin’ for rap’s sake: Towards T.R.A.P. research for collective liberation.-CHAPTER 3:Recalculating…: Hiphopography and decentring scholarship.-CHAPTER 4:Relational hiphopography: Some notes on shared study .-CHAPTER 5:Homeboys: A photo essay on Delhi’s underground hip hop culture.PARTII – FEMININE ENERGY.-CHAPTER 6:Decolonizing African Studies approaches to research on African women in Hip-Hop.- CHAPTER 7:Sisters in the hood: Re-centring gender balance in Hip Hop by creating safe spaces for women.- PART III – MIND, BODY AND SOUL.-CHAPTER 8:How I know, be, move: Embodied Hip Hop Pedagogies as teaching, research, writing, and living praxis .-CHAPTER 9:Flipping the academic discourse: Reflections on corporeal knowledge and gender negotiations in breaking.-CHAPTER 10:Graffuturism: Hiphopographic futures for urban art.- PART IV – FEAR OF A BLACK PLANET.-CHAPTER 11:Translocal hip hop aesthetics: Contemporary performances in Brazilian hip hop.-CHAPTER 12:Racialization and strategic / normalized otherness: A hiphopography of Danish and Finnish rap scenes.- PART V – POLITRICKS.- CHAPTER 13:Real and hypocrisy: The “moral turn” in Chinese Hip Hop music.-CHAPTER 14:Transidiomatism in Da Billas’ Mafohlana rap song: The socio-cultural integration of Mozambican migrants in South Africa.- PART VI – THIS IS A JOURNEY INTO SOUND:CHAPTER 15:The mixtape as Hip Hop historiography: A systematic analysis of record releases of German 1980s Hip Hop.-CHAPTER 16:‘My space trips from Chimoio’: Notes about space and temporality in sampling.-CHAPTER 17:Black sound designs: Reflections on one Brazilian DJ’s approach to a profession
Circa l’autore
Jaspal Naveel Singh is a hip hop head, knowledge producer and soul searcher. He currently works as a Lectuer in Applied Linguistics and English Language at the Open University, UK. His first monograph Transcultural Voices: Narrating Hip Hop Culture in Complex Delhi (2022) develops a hiphopographic approach called global hip hop linguistics to study breakers, graffiti artists, musicians and rappers in the emergent scenes in urban India. Originally from Germany, he has lived and worked in India, Hong Kong and Wales.
Quentin Williams is Director of the Centre for Multilingualism and Diversities Research and an Associate Professor of Sociolinguistics in the Linguistics Department at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. His most recent books are Struggles for Multilingualism and Linguistic Citizenship with Tommaso Milani and Ana Deumert (2022) and Neva Again: Hip Hop Art, Activism and Education in post-apartheid South Africa with Adam Haupt, H Samy Alim and Emile YX? (2019).