Spectacular Vernaculars examines hip-hop’s cultural rebellion in terms of its specific implications for postmodern theory and practice, using the politics of reception as its primary rhetorical ground. Hip-hop culture in general, and rap music in particular, present model sites for such an inquiry, since they enact both postmodern modes of production—the appropriation of tropes, technologies, and material culture—and a potential means of resistance to the commodification of cultural forms under late capitalism. By paying specific attention to the historical and cultural context of hip-hop as a black artform and locating its practice of resistance in terms of a postmodernist reading of consumer culture, this book offers a complex reading of hip-hop as a postmodern practice, with implications both for theories of postmodernism and cultural studies as a whole.
Зміст
Acknowledgments
Introduction–Coming to Terms: Rap Music as Radical Postmodernism
1. Gettin’ Present as an Art: A Signifyin(g) Hipstory of Hip-hop
2. Postmodernity and the Hip-hop Vernacular
3. The Pulse of the Rhyme Flow: Hip-hop Signifyin(g) and the Politics of Reception
4. History–Spectacle–Resistance
5. ‘Are You Afraid of the Mix of Black and White?’ Hip-hop and the Spectacular Politics of Race
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Про автора
Russell A. Potter is Assistant Professor of English at Colby College. He hosts a weekly radio program,
Roots-n-Rap, in Waterville, Maine.