Global Noise: Rap and Hip Hop outside the USA (Music Culture)

Global Noise: Rap and Hip Hop outside the USA (Music Culture)

by TonyMitchell (Editor)

Synopsis

The thirteen essays that comprise Global Noise explore the hip hop scenes of Europe, Anglophone and Francophone Canada, Japan and Australia within their social, cultural and ethnic contexts. Countering the prevailing colonialist view that global hip hop is an exotic and derivative outgrowth of an African-American-owned idiom subject to assessment in terms of American norms and standards, Global Noise shows how international hip hop scenes, like those in France and Australia, developed by first adopting then adapting US models and establishing an increasing hybridity of local linguistic and musical features. The essays reveal diasporic manifestations of international hip hop that are rarely acknowledged in the growing commentary on the genre in the US. In the voices of rappers from around the globe with divergent backgrounds of race, nationality, class and gender, the authors find a consistent rhetoric of opposition and resistance to institutional forms of repression and the construction of a cohesive, historically-based subculture capable of accommodating regional and national diversities. CONTRIBUTORS: Roger Chamberland, Ian Condry, David Hesmondhalgh, Claire Levy, Ian Maxwell, Caspar Melville, Sarah Morelli, Mark Pennay, AndreJ.M. Prevos, Ted Swedenburg, Jacqueline Urla and Mir Wermuth.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Publisher: Wesleyan University Press
Published: 31 Oct 2001

ISBN 10: 0819565024
ISBN 13: 9780819565020

Media Reviews
[A] groundbreaking collection . . . an intelligent, engaging contribution to pop cultural studies . . . Artists, activists and academics will look to this benchmark collection for a long time. --Publishers Weekly
Author Bio
Tony Mitchell is the author of Popular Music and Local Identity: Rock, Pop and Rap in Europe and Oceania (1996). He is Senior Lecturer in Writing and Cultural Studies at the University of Technology, Sydney.