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    Kickin' Some Knowledge: Rap and the Construction of Identity in the African-American Ghetto

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    Author
    Saunders, Ralph H.
    Issue Date
    1993
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Arizona Anthropologist 10:23-38. © 1993 Association of Student Anthropologists Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721
    Publisher
    University of Arizona, Department of Anthropology
    Journal
    Arizona Anthropologist
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/112061
    Abstract
    Rap music and videos provide a potentially powerful lens through which to view inner-city neighborhoods and their residents. Rap also provides ghetto residents with a potentially powerful means with which to write their histories and forge their own identities. The dominant discourse on African Americans relegates them to the margins of historical action. Rap is explored as a kind of alternative public sphere, one in which blacks are reflecting on and challenging that discourse. This paper challenges the wholesale categorization of certain populations or groups as "other," and reaffirms the power of individuals and collectivities to make their own histories.
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en_US
    ISSN
    1062-1601
    Collections
    Arizona Anthropologist: Issue #10 (1993)

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