Loading...

Hip Hop at Europe's Edge

Adriana N. Helbig

  • Bindwijze: E-book
  • Taal: en
  • Categorie: Kunst & Fotografie
  • ISBN: 9780253023216
Music, Agency, and Social Change
Inhoud
Taal:en
Bindwijze:E-book
Oorspronkelijke releasedatum:27 maart 2017
Ebook Formaat:-50211
Betrokkenen
Hoofdauteur:Adriana N. Helbig
Tweede Auteur:Milosz Miszczynski
Co Auteur:Predrag Vukcevic
Hoofdredacteur:Milosz Miszczynski
Tweede Redacteur:Adriana Helbig
Tweede Redacteur:Adriana Helbig
Lees mogelijkheden
Lees dit ebook op:Android (smartphone en tablet) , Kobo e-reader , Desktop (Mac en Windows) , iOS (smartphone en tablet) , Windows (smartphone en tablet)
Overige kenmerken
Studieboek:Nee
Overige kenmerken
Studieboek:Nee

Samenvatting

Essays examining the impact of hip hop music on pop culture and youth identity in post-Soviet Central and Eastern Europe.

Responding to the development of a lively hip hop culture in Central and Eastern European countries, this interdisciplinary study demonstrates how a universal model of hip hop serves as a contextually situated platform of cultural exchange and becomes locally inflected. After the Soviet Union fell, hip hop became popular in urban environments in the region, but it has often been stigmatized as inauthentic, due to an apparent lack of connection to African American historical roots and black identity. Originally strongly influenced by aesthetics from the United States, hip hop in Central and Eastern Europe has gradually developed unique, local trajectories, a number of which are showcased in this volume. On the one hand, hip hop functions as a marker of Western cosmopolitanism and democratic ideology, but as the contributors show, it is also a malleable genre that has been infused with so much local identity that it has lost most of its previous associations with “the West” in the experiences of local musicians, audiences, and producers. Contextualizing hip hop through the prism of local experiences and regional musical expressions, these valuable case studies reveal the broad spectrum of its impact on popular culture and youth identity in the post-Soviet world.

“The volume represents a valuable and timely contribution to the study of popular culture in central and eastern Europe. Hip Hop at Europe’s Edge will not only appeal to readers interested in contemporary popular culture in central and eastern Europe, but also inspire future research on post-socialism’s unique local adaptations of global cultural trends.” —The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review

“The authors of this edited volume do not romanticize and heroize the genre by automatically equating it with political opposition, a fate often suffered by rock before. Instead, the book has to be given much credit for presenting a very nuanced picture of hip hop’s entanglement—or non-entanglement, for that matter—with politics in this wide stretch of the world, past and present.” —The Russian Review