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  2. Black Noise (book) - Wikipedia

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

    In the book, Rose examines rap music and black culture by looking at urban culture politics and rap's racial politics. She also reflects on videos, song lyrics, and interviews with musicians, producers, and other people involved with the rap music industry.

  3. 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'", [67] and N.W.A whose second album Niggaz4Life became the first gangsta rap album to enter ...

  4. West Coast hip hop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Coast_hip_hop

    West Coast hip hop is a regional genre of hip hop music that encompasses any artists or music that originated in the West Coast of the United States.West Coast hip hop began to dominate from a radio play and sales standpoint during the early to-mid 1990s with the birth of G-funk and the emergence of record labels such as Suge Knight and Dr. Dre's Death Row Records, Ice Cube's Lench Mob Records ...

  5. History of hip hop dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_hip_hop_dance

    A hip-hop dancer at Zona club in Moscow. The history of hip-hop dances encompasses the people and events since the late 1960s that have contributed to the development of early hip-hop dance styles, such as uprock, breaking, locking, roboting, boogaloo, and popping. African Americans created uprock and breaking in New York City.

  6. Misogyny in rap music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misogyny_in_rap_music

    Misogyny in rap music. Misogyny in rap music is defined as lyrics, videos, or other components of rap music that encourage, glorify, justify, or legitimize the objectification, exploitation, or victimization of women. It is an ideology that depicts women as objects for men to own, use, and abuse. It reduces women to expendable beings.

  7. The Anthology of Rap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Anthology_of_Rap

    ISBN. 9780300141917. The Anthology of Rap is a 2010 rap music anthology published by Yale University Press, with Adam Bradley and Andrew DuBois as the editors [1]. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. wrote the foreword, while Chuck D and Common wrote the afterwords. Bradley and DuBois are English professors, [2] at the associate level at the University of ...

  8. We Real Cool: Black Men and Masculinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_Real_Cool:_Black_Men...

    ISBN. 0415969271. bell hooks in 2009. We Real Cool: Black Men and Masculinity is a 2004 book about masculinity by feminist author bell hooks. It collects ten essays on black men. The title alludes to Gwendolyn Brooks ' 1959 poem "We Real Cool". The essays are intended to provide cultural criticism and solutions to the problems she identifies.

  9. Hip hop music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hip_hop_music

    Chuck Philips, Los Angeles Times, 1992 Gangsta rap is a subgenre of hip hop that reflects the violent lifestyles of inner-city American black youths. Gangsta is a non-rhotic pronunciation of the word gangster. The genre was pioneered in the mid-1980s by rappers such as Schoolly D and Ice-T, and was popularized in the later part of the 1980s by groups like N.W.A. In 1985 Schoolly D released "P ...