Thug Life Thug Life

Thug Life

Race, Gender, and the Meaning of Hip-Hop

    • $31.99
    • $31.99

Publisher Description

Hip-hop has come a long way from its origins in the Bronx in the 1970s, when rapping and DJing were just part of a lively, decidedly local scene that also venerated b-boying and graffiti. Now hip-hop is a global phenomenon and, in the United States, a massively successful corporate enterprise predominantly controlled and consumed by whites while the most prominent performers are black. How does this shift in racial dynamics affect our understanding of contemporary hip-hop, especially when the music perpetuates stereotypes of black men? Do black listeners interpret hip-hop differently from white fans?

These questions have dogged hip-hop for decades, but unlike most pundits, Michael P. Jeffries finds answers by interviewing everyday people. Instead of turning to performers or media critics, Thug Life focuses on the music’s fans—young men, both black and white—and the resulting account avoids romanticism, offering an unbiased examination of how hip-hop works in people’s daily lives. As Jeffries weaves the fans’ voices together with his own sophisticated analysis, we are able to understand hip-hop as a tool listeners use to make sense of themselves and society as well as a rich, self-contained world containing politics and pleasure, virtue and vice.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2011
January 15
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
280
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of Chicago Press
SELLER
Chicago Distribution Center
SIZE
1.4
MB
Hip Hop Headphones Hip Hop Headphones
2016
Prophets of the Hood Prophets of the Hood
2004
The Real Hiphop The Real Hiphop
2009
Hip-Hop Authenticity and the London Scene Hip-Hop Authenticity and the London Scene
2017
Microphone Fiends Microphone Fiends
2014
I Got Something to Say I Got Something to Say
2018
Paint the White House Black Paint the White House Black
2013
Behind the Laughs Behind the Laughs
2017