Hip-hop Urbanism Old and New

The sustained connection between hip‐hop and urban identity stems in part from the origins of hip‐hop culture in post‐industrial American cities during the late twentieth century. But hip‐hop urbanism cannot be reduced to nostalgia or respect for previous traditions, as changing spatial demographics...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of urban and regional research 2014-03, Vol.38 (2), p.706-715
1. Verfasser: Jeffries, Michael P.
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description The sustained connection between hip‐hop and urban identity stems in part from the origins of hip‐hop culture in post‐industrial American cities during the late twentieth century. But hip‐hop urbanism cannot be reduced to nostalgia or respect for previous traditions, as changing spatial demographics and the evolution of hip‐hop production and consumption force a disaggregation and reconsideration of ‘urban music’. Contemporary hip‐hop research in the United States must focus not only on the black and Latino communities responsible for hip‐hop's genesis, but on modern‐day race‐ and class‐based power dynamics, as well as on communities and social networks that are not typically considered urban. Ethnographers are especially well‐positioned to lead this field, thanks to methodological and theoretical tools that allow them to focus on smaller and emergent musical communities in flux.
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source Wiley-Blackwell Journals; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Cities
Consumption
Cultural Identity
Ethnic Identity
ethnicity
Ethnography
Evolution
Hip Hop
Hip hop culture
Hip hop music
Hispanic Americans
Identity
Power Structure
Race
racism
rap
Social history
Sociology
Twentieth Century
Urban Areas
Urbanism
Urbanization
USA
title Hip-hop Urbanism Old and New
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