Kniha Check it While I Wreck it Gwendolyn D Pough

Check it While I Wreck it

Jazyk: Angličtina
Vazba: Brožovaná
Vydavatel: Eurospan
Dostupnost: 50 % šance
Prohledáme celý svět
637
Hip-hop culture began in the early 1970s as the creative and activist expressions - graffiti writing...

Informace o knize

Jazyk
Angličtina
Vazba
Kniha - Brožovaná
Vydáno
2004
Stránek
256
EAN
9781555536077
ISBN
1555536077
Enbook ID
01347997
Vydavatel
Hmotnost
495
Rozměry
157 x 232 x 24

Kompletní popis

Hip-hop culture began in the early 1970s as the creative and activist expressions - graffiti writing, dee-jaying, break dancing, and rap music - of black and Latino youth in the depressed South Bronx, and the movement has since grown into a worldwide cultural phenomenon that permeates almost every aspect of society, from speech to dress. While hip-hop has been assimilated and exploited in the mainstream, young black women who came of age during the hip-hop era are grappling with the gender politics of a predominately masculine space. In this provocative study, Gwendolyn D. Pough explores the complex relationship between black women, hip-hop, and feminism. Examining a wide range of genres, including rap music, novels, spoken word poetry, hip-hop cinema, and hip-hop soul music, she traces the rhetoric of black women "bringing wreck." Pough demonstrates how influential women rappers such as Queen Latifah, Missy Elliot, and Lil' Kim are building on the legacy of earlier generations of women - from Sojourner Truth to sisters of the black power and civil rights movements - to disrupt and break into the dominant patriarchal public sphere. She discusses the ways in which today's young black women struggle against the stereotypical language of the past ("castrating black mother," "mammy," "sapphire") and the present ("bitch," "ho," "chickenhead"), and shows how rap provides an avenue to tell their own life stories, to construct their identities, and to dismantle historical and contemporary negative representations of black womanhood. Pough also looks at the on-going public dialogue between male and female rappers about love and relationships, explaining how the denigrating rhetoric used by men has been appropriated by black women rappers as a means to empowerment in their own lyrics. The author concludes with a discussion of the pedagogical implications of rap music as well as of third wave and black feminism. This fresh and thought-provoking perspective on the complexities of hip-hop urges young black women to harness the energy, vitality, and activist roots of hip-hop culture and rap music to claim a public voice for themselves and to "bring wreck" on sexism and misogyny in mainstream society.

Mohlo by vás zajímat

Teaching Spelling

Peter Westwood
1 152
433

Echoes of Fire

Laurel McKinley
331

This Little Art

Kate Briggs
345

Character

J. Phillip London
770

Red Nails

Robert Ervin Howard
384

Breeding Ground

B L Breininger
347

Lingo

Gaston Dorren
252

Zákaznicí kteří koupili tuto knihu koupili také

115

Dissipando a Nevoa

Paulo Cesar Guimaraes
25
432
291