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HipHop in São Paulo und Berlin ästhetische Praxis und Ausgrenzungserfahrungen junger Schwarzer und Migranten /Weller, Wivian. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Freie Universität, Berlin. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Desacordes de gênero em um movimento artístico-cultural: os lugares das mulheres no hip hop de Campina Grande - PB.LIMA, Mércia Ferreira de. 16 November 2017 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2016-05-09 / O presente trabalho é resultado de uma pesquisa em antropologia urbana e traz
um debate sobre a participação da mulher dentro do hip hop de Campina GrandePB.
O objetivo do trabalho é entender como a mulher aparece no movimento hip
hop da cidade, partindo de um recorte de gênero. Tendo a etnografia como
principal método da pesquisa, foi feito uma análise de como as mulheres estão
inseridas e como é sua aceitação por parte dos homens do movimento da cidade.
A análise cronológica desde o surgimento do hip hop a nível global até sua
chegada à cidade de Campina Grande foi de grande relevância para compreender
a dinâmica do hip hop e de como a mulher está inserida. Dentro das
possibilidades da pesquisa, buscou-se fazer o mapeamento dos lugares que as
jovens mulheres do movimento hip hop frequentam, bem como a articulação que
elas estabelecem. Por ser um movimento que teve suas origens na rua, não se
deve descartar que a rua era e, de certa forma, ainda continua sendo um espaço
para o protagonismo masculino. Sendo um movimento constituído por 4
elementos, a mulher aparece em apenas dois desses elementos, o break e o
grafite. Essa participação deve ser vista dentro das relações que envolvem outras
categorias sociais, tais como classe, raça, grau de escolaridade.
Paradoxalmente, não deixa de ser revelador, que um movimento que denuncia e
luta contra vários tipos de exclusão social, acaba por produzir, ele mesmo, formas
de exclusão social, que atinge o gênero feminino de maneira marcante. / This work is the result of research in Urban Anthropology and brings a debate on
the participation of women in hip hop Campina Grande-PB. The objective of this
work is to understand how the woman appears in the hip hop movement in the
city, starting from a gender perspective. Having ethnography as the main method
of research was done an analysis of how women are inserted and how their
acceptance by men of the city movement. The chronological analysis from the
emergence of hip hop globally until his arrival in the city of Campina Grande was
of great importance to understand the dynamics of hip hop and how the woman is
inserted. Within the scope of the research, we sought to do the mapping of the
places that the young women of the hip hop movement attend, and the link they
establish. To be a movement that had its origins in the street, one should not rule
out that the street was and, in a way, remains a space for the male role. Being a
movement composed of four elements, the woman appears in only two of these
elements, the break and graffiti. This participation should be seen within
relationships involving other social categories such as class, race, level of
education. Paradoxically, it is still revealing a motion denouncing and combating
various types of social exclusion, it produces himself, forms of social exclusion,
which affects the women markedly.
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Hip-hop – Sujeito e(m) movimento: análise discursiva da imbricação entre as materialidades linguística, imagética e musical em um videoclipe publicado no Youtube.comTrajano, Raphael de Morais 17 April 2017 (has links)
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TESE-TEXTUAL-VERSÃO FINAL.pdf: 5066485 bytes, checksum: bd6db4948b6dcf41f005e50704721346 (MD5) / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / Filiada ao aparato teórico metodológico da Análise do Discurso (PÊCHEUX (1969); ORLANDI, 1984a), esta tese analisa o funcionamento das determinações históricas que constituem discursos do e sobre o movimento hip hop. Para tal, toma como material de análise o videoclipe Causa e efeito (BILL, 2011), publicado no Youtube.com, além das apreciações e comentários de sujeitos-internautas. Pela observação dos efeitos de sentido produzidos na imbricação material significante (LAGAZZI, 2010) entre letra, imagem e música, perpassadas pelo discurso eletrônico enquanto fundamentalmente urbano (ORLANDI, 2010), observa-se o modo histórico de constituição, formulação e circulação dos sentidos e de sujeitos que assumem posições discursivas situadas na tensão entre a reprodução de e a resistência a sentidos dominantes. Com base nas compreensões obtidas a partir das análises, promove-se uma discussão a propósito da maneira como o sujeito-rapper significa escola e educação, o que conduz a reflexões possíveis no tocante à relação entre a produção de efeitos de sentido nos imaginários do discurso hip hop e os efeitos da ligação entre sujeito, escola e trabalho enquanto evidência ideológica neoliberal. Desse modo, discute-se o que uma análise discursiva teria a dizer acerca das possibilidades de deslocamento do professor em face de determinações ideológicas que atravessam as práticas de ensino no ambiente escolar. Ademais, diante da incumbência de analisar diferentes materialidades discursivas em composição, busca-se oferecer contribuições teórico-metodológicas que acarretem avanços, principalmente, no que concerne à análise do imagético e do que se nomeou, neste trabalho, como materialidade significante da musicalidade / Affiliated with the theoretical and methodological apparatus of Discourse Analysis (PÊCHEUX (1969); ORLANDI, 1984a), this doctoral thesis analyzes the operation of historical determinations that constitute discourses on and about the hip hop movement. For this, its material for analysis is the music video entitled Causa e efeito (BILL, 2011), posted on Youtube.com, in addition to assessments and comments from internet users subjects. By the observation of the meaning effects produced in the significant material combination (LAGAZZI, 2010) between lyrics, image and music, pervaded by the electronic discourse as fundamentally urban (DIAS, 2011), it is noted the historical mode of constitution, formulation and circulation of meanings and of subjects that take discourse positions along the tension between the reproduction of dominant meanings and the resistance to them. Based on the understanding achieved through the analysis, we promote a discussion concerning the manner the rapper-subject means school and education, what leads to possible considerations about the relationship between meaning effects production in the imaginaries of hip hop discourse and the effects of the liaison between subject, school and work while neoliberal ideological evidence. Thus, we discuss what a discursive analysis would have to say about the teacher’s possibilities for movement in the face of ideological determinations that cross the teaching practices in the school environment. Furthermore, considering the task of analyzing different discursive materialities in composition, we aim to offer theoretical and methodological contributions which may result in developments especially in regard to the analysis of imagery and to what has been denominated in this work as significant materiality of musicality
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Eso No es Rap es Vida Real: Latinx Chicago Hip Hop Artists as Organic Intellectuals, Taking Control of the Narratives of their CommunitiesRoman, Nike 01 January 2016 (has links)
This thesis analyzes at how Latinx Hip Hop artists from Chicago act as organic intellectuals within their community and how they use their platform as artists to challenge the narratives created by government officials that aim to criminalize their community in an effort to normalize and justify the policing of their neighborhoods.
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The emergence of post-hybrid identities : a comparative analysis of national identity formations in Germany's contemporary hip-hop cultureMunderloh, Marissa K. January 2016 (has links)
This thesis examines how hip-hop has become a meaningful cultural movement for contemporary artists in Hamburg and in Oldenburg. The comparative analysis is guided by a three-dimensional theoretical framework that considers the spatial, historical and social influences, which have shaped hip-hop music, dance, rap and graffiti art in the USA and subsequently in the two northern German cities. The research methods entail participant observation, semi-structured interviews and a close reading of hip-hop's cultural texts in the form of videos, photographs and lyrics. The first chapter analyses the manifestation of hip-hop music in Hamburg. The second chapter looks at the local adaptation of hip-hop's dance styles. The last two chapters on rap and graffiti art present a comparative analysis between the art forms' appropriation in Hamburg and in Oldenburg. In comparing hip-hop's four main elements and their practices in two distinct cities, this research project expands current German hip-hop scholarship beyond the common focus on rap, especially in terms of rap being a voice of the minority. It also offers insights into the ways in which artists express their local, regional or national identity as a culturally hybrid state, since hip-hop's art forms have always been the result of cultural and artistic mixture. The theoretical focus on spatiality, historicality and sociality moreover reveals different and even contradicting manifestations of cultural hybridity and identity in hip-hop. In particular, this thesis looks at the formation of post-hybrid identities, with which hip-hop artists aim at expressing their multiculturality as an inherent part of their life in Germany.
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The role of Rap/Hip Hop music in the meaning and maintenance of identity in South African youth.Cohen, Dror 06 March 2009 (has links)
Although music has seemingly always formed an integral part of human culture,
technological advances in contemporary society have increased both its accessibility
and portability, allowing for unprecedented production and consumption of a medium
that allows individuals to enact and display various social identities during day-to-day
life. Furthermore, recent research has demonstrated that youth consume more music
that any other age group. Thus music may be considered as a primary cultural
influence in the lives of youth. While the bulk of the research conducted in
understanding the form and function of this influence has been located in the
disciplines of sociology and musicology, Psychologists in Europe and America have
become increasingly interested in understanding the role of music in constructing and
maintaining identity during this critical period of development. As a contribution to
this field of application outside of these contexts and located within a qualitative
framework, this study explored the role of Rap/Hip Hop music, as one of the most
popular global and local genres of music, in the meaning and maintenance of identity
in a cohort of South African youth. The resultant thematic framework illustrated the
complex tensions negotiated by youth through assuming Hip Hop culture membership
in South Africa. Importantly, the study showed that the nature of Hip Hop culture; its
emphasis on self-expression, individuation and critical social awareness dovetails
with many of the traditional psychological developmental theories of youth identity.
Hip Hop consumption also implied appropriating identity markers from a wide range
of social influences, posing challenges to the application of traditional social identity
theory in accounting for in and out groupings. This was most pronounced in the way
that ‘remixing’, as a governing musical principle in Hip Hop seems to resonate as key
mode of identity and identification amongst its South African consumers. Thus, it
seems fitting that South African youth currently in the midst of cultural, economic and
political transitions would embrace an eclectic rather than rigidly bounded genre of
music with such enthusiasm. In some ways then Hip Hop in South Africa, appears to
provide youth with the means to remix past and present, old and new, global and
local, self and other.
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The Political Economy of Financially Successful Independent Hip Hop ArtistsOstrove, Geoffrey, Ostrove, Geoffrey January 2012 (has links)
From 2000 to 2010, America's music industry's annual revenue went from $4 billion to $2 billion. Much of this is attributed to the internet's ability to provide consumers with easy access to free music, and hip hop has been especially impacted by this trend.
Utilizing document analysis and personal interviews, this study found that the success of independent artists has influenced the business strategies of major record companies. In response to a dramatic decrease in record sales, major labels have made more of an effort to sign their artists to 360 deals, which allow the labels to profit from every aspect of an artist's brand or identity.
While some independent artists are the main beneficiary of the profits generated from their music and personal brand, they also reify the commodity-form capitalist system by attempting to turn their music and brand into a fetishized commodity and by turning their audience into a commodity.
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Something Real: Rap, Resistance, and the Music of the SoulquariansPeterson, Sean 06 September 2018 (has links)
From 1997-2002, a loose collective of hip hop and R&B musicians known as The Soulquarians collaborated to produce numerous award-winning and critically-acclaimed albums. Drawn together by the heady atmosphere of collaboration with creative, like-minded peers, they were driven by a goal to create alternative sounds and representations in black music. This project has two primary goals: to historicize the collaboration of the Soulquarians and to identify and analyze aspects of their music that situated it in opposition to commercially dominant hip hop of its day. To do so, I perform close listening and analysis of recordings, interviews, liner notes, album and concert reviews, and articles on the Soulquarians and their work from contemporary print media, and draw from biographies and autobiographies of Soulquarians artists.
This project contributes to music scholarship in three primary ways. First, I utilize an innovative technique to visually analyze microtiming in the groundbreaking grooves of J Dilla and D'Angelo. Using this technique, I precisely identify distinguishing timing features in drums and bass, and make them visible to the reader. By contextualizing these findings within previous scholarship on rhythm in African American music performance, I fill a gap in scholarship on groove, which has not yet described the variety of these influential rhythms. Second, I compile information from a variety of sources (web, print, liner notes, interviews) on the Soulquarians into one location. This produces a fuller picture of the collaboration than has previously been available, and facilitates access to a breadth of information on individual Soulquarians artists, and the collective. Third, I identify several musical traits that resulted from the collaborative nature of the Soulquarians’ work habits, including specific commonalities between the grooves of J Dilla and D'Angelo, and the use in Badu’s music of imitative strategies pioneered by The Roots. This presents a richer picture of artists’ working practices than is typically advanced by journalism and scholarship on hip hop. Because cooperative aspects of the Soulquarians’ working methods also characterize music communities more broadly, this description of their collaboration may serve as a corrective to popular but misguided notions of sole authorship in popular music.
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Appraisal of Beyoncé Knowles as a popular artist: Analysing the evaluative discourse of the online fan baseShabodien, Zareena January 2011 (has links)
Magister Artium - MA / This research uses the Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL) approach, more specifically, the appraisal theory to analyse the online message postings by fans of the popular music artist, Beyoncé Knowles. Through their online writings, insight into their evaluative discourses is gained. This research focuses on the emotional, judgemental and evaluative stance in their writings, especially; the linguistic choices that the online fans use in order to convey their attitudes: appreciation and judgement and affect towards Knowles. In order to do such an analysis, the study considers the different Systemic Functional Linguistic (SFL) levels of meaning (interpersonal, textual and experiential metafunctions). Several questions become pertinent: What kinds of interpersonal relations and identities are implicated on the message boards? (Interpersonal metafunction). How are these expressed textually? (Textual metafunction). What kinds of experiences/fields are implicated in the messages? (Experiential metafunction). The research concludes that in terms of identity, fans tend to latch onto a Hip-Hop culture in order to create and maintain a connection to Knowles. Fans display this linguistically by writing certain words out phonetically as they would be pronounced orally. Gender boundaries are transgressed irrespective of the fans' gender. Posts also demonstrate colourful expressive responses in relation to Knowles. Whether the fan is male or female, both feel comfortable in using emotive language to demonstrate the impact which she has on their lives. In terms of appreciation fans tend to express that she has inspired and changed their lives. Attitudes explored demonstrated that a number of Knowles' fans hold positive viewpoints and therefore they would align themselves positively towards her. The element of judgement was explored from different perspectives in relation to Knowles. One, being a website which suggested that Knowles had undergone an evil transformation. For evidence, these fans used her lyrics, gestures and images selectively as a way to "prove" their arguments. As a contribution to knowledge, this research is useful in the sense that when individuals log online and leave their posts on message boards, they do not always realise the impact of the message that they leave behind. Using SFL and the appraisal theory, one is able to establish the attitudes: judgements, appreciation and affect individuals hold towards a particular topic or person (in this case towards Knowles). Through linguistically analysing message boards, one is able to connect individuals to possible identity options. In essence, the letters and words which individuals have strung together create a greater picture than what was possibly intended. Linguistically, it opens more avenues for exploration.
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"What Really Goes On": Exploring a University-Based Critical Hip-Hop Pedagogy Teacher Education CourseRose, Courtney Elizabeth January 2018 (has links)
Recently there has been a call to disrupt the continuous cycle of (re)production from within university-based programs through the development of transformative approaches rooted in the cultural norms of traditionally marginalized populations. This study aimed to explore how one such approach, critical hip-hop pedagogy (CHHP), manifests within the formal university-based teacher education setting. Focusing on one specific course in a prestigious, Northeastern university, this study explores how the course was conceptualized, enacted, experienced and interpreted by both the professor and twelve enrolled teachers in the Spring 2017 semester.
Through qualitative case study methodology the purpose of this study was to: (1) document the ways that one CHHP teacher educator carves out space for his work amidst the politically charged teacher education space; (2) document and analyze the pedagogical moves embedded in the praxis of one teacher educator who teaches a university-based course designed to prepare teachers to utilize hip-hop cultural artifacts and aesthetics to critical educational ends; and (3) document and analyze the ways in which enrolled pre-service teachers experience, conceptualize, and interpret these practices.
Four key findings are presented: (1) the professor conceptualized and enacted the course as a means of disrupting dominant narratives about acceptable and effective approaches to teaching and learning; (2) his enactments of CHHP embodied hip-hop cultural practices and aesthetics through his (re)conceptualization of teacher as MC; (3) the course’s structure through the aesthetics and rules of engagement of the hip-hop cypher provided a variety of ways for students to actively participate in the processes of knowledge production; (4) enrolled teachers reported new understandings of hip-hop as culture, resulting in shifts in perspectives on key issues impacting education and their visions for themselves as educators. Given these findings, this study suggests that the professor’s construction and enactment of the course resulted in an immersive experience in which he taught through a CHHP framework rather than about it, as is often seen in courses claiming similar critical multicultural and culturally relevant approaches, creating a dynamic immersive cultural experience for the enrolled teachers.
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