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  2. Hip-hop in academia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip-Hop_in_academia

    Hip Hop studies has been growing as an academic discipline since the mid-1990s; two decades after its genesis. By the millennium and in the early 2000s, scholars such as Tricia Rose, Michael Eric Dyson, Cornel West, Anthony B. Pinn, Jeff Chang, Nelson George, Bakari Kitwana, Mark Anthony Neal, and Murray Forman, began to engage Hip Hop's history, messages of resistance, social cognizance ...

  3. Hip-hop based education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip-hop_based_education

    The lessons include subjects such as mathematics, science, social justice, literacy, and language arts. The education guide introduces teachers to the many ways that hip-hop education can be used in the classroom and it also validated teachers who had previously implemented hip-hop into their curriculum.

  4. How to Rap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Rap

    How to Rap: The Art & Science of the Hip-Hop MC was published by Chicago Review Press on December 1, 2009 with a foreword by Kool G Rap. [2] [5] [6] Publishers Weekly states that it “goes into everything from why rappers freestyle to the challenges of collaboration in hip-hop”, [7] and Library Journal says, "instruction ranges over selecting topics and form, editing, rhyming techniques ...

  5. Political hip-hop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_hip-hop

    Underground rap, also known as underground hip hop, is a subgenre of hip hop known for its political and socially conscious lyrics. Unlike mainstream rap, which often focuses on themes such as money, power, and fame, underground rap addresses more serious and often controversial topics, such as racism, police brutality, and social inequality. [5]

  6. Hip-hop culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip-hop_culture

    Rapper Ice-T. With the commercial success of gangsta rap in the early 1990s, the emphasis in lyrics shifted to drugs, violence, and misogyny.Early proponents of gangsta rap included groups and artists such as Ice-T, who recorded what some consider to be the first gangsta rap single, "6 in the Mornin'", [68] and N.W.A whose second album Niggaz4Life became the first gangsta rap album to enter ...

  7. Progressive rap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_rap

    Progressive rap music is defined by its critical themes around societal concerns such as structural inequalities and political responsibility. According to Lincoln University professor and author Emery Petchaur, artists in the genre frequently analyze "structural, systematic, and reproduced" sources of oppression and inequality in the world, [3] while Anthony B. Pinn of Rice University ...

  8. Hip-hop and social injustice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip_hop_and_social_injustice

    The relationship between hip hop music and social injustice can be seen most clearly in two subgenres of hip hop, gangsta rap and conscious rap. Political hip hop has been criticized by conservative politicians such as Mississippi State Senator Chris McDaniel [ 1 ] as divisive and promoting separatism due to some hip hop artists' pro-black and ...

  9. Black Noise (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Noise_(book)

    Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America is a 1994 book by Tricia Rose. It was released in hardback on April 29, 1994 through Wesleyan University Press . Synopsis