Hip-hop by the book: from scholarly titles to children's books, hip-hop takes on a new life in print.Love it or hate it, hip-hop music is, in its most inspiring moments, literature accompanied by beats and tunes, an idea legitimized when colleges including the University of Wyoming UW is a national research university prominent in the fields of environment and natural resource research, specializing in agriculture, energy, geology, and water resource related fields. and University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). began teaching courses on Tupac's life. Even though the form itself is narrative come to life, it appears that for many hip-hoppers, lyrics aren't enough to whet their insatiable appetites for more of the culture. The people want books, and publishers, it seems, are quite eager to provide them. If you're really ah avid hip-hopper, forget the CDs; this Black Music Month, troop over to your local bookshop, which is sure to be brimming with books about the culture. Online book giant Amazon.com holds more than 200 books related to hip-hop; competitor Barnes & Noble carries over 500. (Books with rock `n' roll in the title, by contrast, number past 700 for both retailers.) At this rate, it's now quite possible to own a respectable library comprising works about hip-hop. The spate of books about hip-hop in the marketplace is further proof that the culture itself has a dizzying ability to turn everything associated with it into gold--or perhaps more befitting be·fit·ting adj. Appropriate; suitable; proper. be·fit ting·ly adv.Adj. 1. , platinum. But given the occasional tendency for rappers' lyrics to expertly dodge intelligent dialogue and wander in the superficial and shallow--hit song titles like "Big Ole Butt" and "Bling Bling Noun 1. bling bling - flashy, ostentatious jewelry; "the rapper was loaded with bling" bling jewellery, jewelry - an adornment (as a bracelet or ring or necklace) made of precious metals and set with gems (or imitation gems) " come to mind--one can hardly be blamed for assuming that books about rap and hip-hop could be equally wisdom-free. Not so. Actually, quite a few hip-hop books examine the culture with sharp, exploratory analysis. Tomes, many by self-identified participants of the culture (read: young blacks), range in scope from relevant social introspection introspection /in·tro·spec·tion/ (in?trah-spek´shun) contemplation or observation of one's own thoughts and feelings; self-analysis.introspec´tive in·tro·spec·tion n. to music criticism to smart artist profiles. Writer and scholar Tricia Rose won an American Book Award in 1995 for her work Black Noise: Rap Music rap music or hip-hop, genre originating in the mid-1970s among black and Hispanic performers in New York City, at first associated with an athletic style of dancing, known as breakdancing. and Black Culture in Contemporary America (Wesleyan University Press Wesleyan University Press, founded (in present form) in 1959, is a university press that is part of Wesleyan University (Connecticut). External link
abbr. International Standard Book Number ISBN International Standard Book Number ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 0-819-56275-0), an honor that might suggest that some folks who are not necessarily devoted hip-hop listeners may be willing to read about it. Someone's buying this stuff. And there's hefty load of books that put the culture into a well-deserved intellectual context. Nelson George has Hip Hop hip-hop or hip hop n. 1. A popular urban youth culture, closely associated with rap music and with the style and fashions of African-American inner-city residents. 2. Rap music. adj. America (Penguin USA, October 1999, ISBN 0-140-28022-7), an analysis of how the pastime of American black kids became an international phenomenon; similarly Vibe published its oeuvre to the genre, Vibe History of Hip Hop (Three Rivers Three Rivers, Que., Canada: see Trois Rivières. Press, October 1999, ISBN 0-609-80503-7), a collection of thoughtful essays by prominent writers and cultural critics that trace hip-hop's expansion into a global industry. Music journalist Margeaux Watson, who authored some chapters of Vibe magazine's book about women in hip-hop, says she was pleased to write for a book illustrating how far women had come in a male-dominated industry. "The cool thing about it was showing that black women in music can be more than the butch girl or the sex vixen vixen female fox. . It helped show a middle-class sensibility that the black experience is broader than just a few types of things." Weighty academic interpretations notwithstanding, hip-hoppers have produced some great coffee-table photobooks, too. Hip Hop Immortals (Immortal Brands, September 2002, ISBN 0-972-07461-9), perhaps the best example, is a superb and almost aristocratic collection of exceptional photographs (only 5,000 copies were printed) bound in a heavy, gorgeous hardcover. Immortals is clearly meant to be pop culture as high art, and it works. Two other new releases, Who Shot Ya? (Amistad, October 2002, ISBN 0-066-21168-9) and Yes Yes Y'all (De Capo Press, October 2002, ISBN 0-306-81224-X) represent the largely nostalgic hip-hop books: the first a collection of photos and the latter a mixture of photos and testimonials from the urbanites who essentially invented the form. It may soon be that a baller just isn't a baller anymore unless there's a book about his or her life; Eminem has one, as does former Bad Boy-turned-preacher Mase, and DMX See DMX512. , whose E.A.R.L. autobiography received some critical praise. Tupac Shakur is practically a genre in himself,, he has at least 10 titles dedicated to him, including Tupac: Resurrection, 1971-1996 (Pocket Books, June 2003, ISBN 0-743-47434-1), a classy new book of Tupac memorabilia including photos. Like Tupac, The Notorious B.I.G.'s life was good fodder for books, chiefly because both of their murders remain mysteries. Of course, not all books about hip-hop resonate with any real poignancy, and they are not always, unlike a Jay-Z album, certain to net publishers the levels of platinum cheddar they hope for. The Scholastic publishing company, known for its Clifford character and Harry Potter and its successful book fairs through elementary school elementary school: see school. , unveiled a series of children books last year. Rapper LL Cool J authored one, And the Winner Is ... (Scholastic Trade, September 2002, ISBN 0-439-38911-9), as did Shaggy shaggy /shag·gy/ (shag´e) 1. covered with, having, or resembling rough long hair or wool. 2. having a rough texture or surface or hairlike processes. (HipKidHop: Hope, Cartwheel Books, February 2003, ISBN 0-439-38048-0) and Doug E. Fresh (Think Again, Cartwheel Books, September 2002, ISBN 0-439-31387-2); and each book came with a CD so young readers could rap along. Though insiders had high hopes for the books, which seemed like an excellent way to lure just one niche of American kids away from TV to books, the works didn't reap the kind of success they'd hoped. Says one staffer, "I think they might have been underpromoted. They came out, and you sort of didn't hear anything else about them. I think the people who need to read them are not aware" Whether the flop was due to poor marketing or simply because the audience wasn't interested remains a mystery, but the source says the books are "cool and worth reading. They have good messages like protecting yourself from strangers, being a good winner. It's not frivolous stuff" Either way, the company is trying again; more "HipKidHop" books are on the way. Kids books represent just one more of the veritable limitless niches hip-hop books can cater to. Given the apparent literary and marketing savvy of writers and publishers who've released the hundreds of titles already available, more great ideas are waiting to be capitalized upon. It's a promising notion that the poets of the Zeitgeist, celebrated and criticized for their observations of the ghettos and world at large, will leave behind not only an infinite amount of defining recordings, but spawn literature for future generations to reflect on as well. How's that for a beat that never ends. Malcolm Venable, who authored "Hip-Hop by the Book" (RHYTHM & BOOKS, p. 24), is a writer and artist in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. . His work has appeared in publications including Entertainment Weekly, Time Out New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , Vibe and The Source. Venable is a graduate of the School of Journalism at Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions. , and is now completing a work of fiction. |
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