Hip Hop as Martial Art: A Political Economy of Violence in Rap Music.Hip Hop Life Writing: An Intermedial Challenge to Essentialist Reading Practices.Recuperating the Real: The Liberation Imperative of Hip Hop Authenticity.Mo’ Money Mo’ Problems: Hip Hop and Luxury’s Uneasy Partnership.All in the Family: The Contested Meanings of Mothers, Fathers, and Children in Hip Hop Culture.Intersectionality in American Sign Language Hip Hop Interpreting.Properly Compensating Artists in Academic Hip Hop Research.From Black Hipsters to Black Hippy: Flow and the Cultural Genealogy of “Neo-Bohemian” Hip Hop.Vocal Vulnerabilities: The New Masculinities of Millennial Hip Hop.“I’m Ready to Die”: The Notorious B.I.G., Black Love, and Death.For Those in the “Ghetto Torture Chambers”: Iceberg Slim, Pulp Authenticity, and the Noir Tradition in Hip Hop.“Check Out the Hook While My DJ Revolves It”: How the Music Industry Made Rap into Pop in the Late 1980s.On Politics and Performativity in Atlanta Hip Hop Party Culture, Or How to Get Crunk with (Body and) Words.Between Live Performance and Mediated Narrative: Contemporary Rap Battle Culture in Context.The Strain of the Voice: Hip Hop’s Ambient Vocalities.Crate Digging Begins at Home: Black and Latinx Women Collecting and Selecting Records in the 1960s and 1970s Bronx.
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