Hip Hop in American Cinema

Hip Hop in American Cinema
Title Hip Hop in American Cinema PDF eBook
Author Melvin Burke Donalson
Publisher Peter Lang
Total Pages 208
Release 2007
Genre Music
ISBN 9780820463452

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Hip Hop in American Cinema examines the manner in which American feature films have served as the primary medium for mainstreaming hip hop culture into American society. With their glamorizing portrayals of graffiti writing, break dancing, rap music, clothing, and language, Hollywood movies have established hip hop as a desirable youth movement. This book demonstrates how Hollywood studios and producers have exploited the profitable connection among rappers, soundtracks, and mass audiences. Hip Hop in American Cinema offers valuable information for courses in film studies, popular culture, and American studies.

Hip Hop on Film

Hip Hop on Film
Title Hip Hop on Film PDF eBook
Author Kimberly Monteyne
Publisher Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages 289
Release 2013-09-19
Genre Music
ISBN 1617039225

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A reclamation and interpretation of a once-dismissed aspect of American film history

Representing

Representing
Title Representing PDF eBook
Author S. Craig Watkins
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Total Pages 334
Release 1998
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 9780226874890

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Representing examines developments in black cinema. It looks at the distinct contradiction in American society, black youths have become targets of a racial backlash but their popular cultures have become commercially viable.

Hip Hop on Film

Hip Hop on Film
Title Hip Hop on Film PDF eBook
Author Kimberley Monteyne
Publisher Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages 288
Release 2013-09-13
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 162846903X

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Early hip hop film musicals have either been expunged from cinema history or excoriated in brief passages by critics and other writers. Hip Hop on Film reclaims and reexamines productions such as Breakin’ (1984), Beat Street (1984), and Krush Groove (1985) in order to illuminate Hollywood’s fascinating efforts to incorporate this nascent urban culture into conventional narrative forms. Such films presented musical conventions against the backdrop of graffiti-splattered trains and abandoned tenements in urban communities of color, setting the stage for radical social and political transformations. Hip hop musicals are also part of the broader history of teen cinema, and films such as Charlie Ahearn’s Wild Style (1983) are here examined alongside other contemporary youth-oriented productions. As suburban teen films banished parents and children to the margins of narrative action, hip hop musicals, by contrast, presented inclusive and unconventional filial groupings that included all members of the neighborhood. These alternative social configurations directly referenced specific urban social problems, which affected the stability of inner city families following diminished governmental assistance in communities of color during the 1980s. Breakdancing, a central element of hip hop musicals, is also reconsidered. It gained widespread acclaim at the same time that these films entered the theaters, but the nation’s newly discovered dance form was embattled—caught between a multitude of institutional entities such as the ballet academy, advertising culture, and dance publications that vied to control its meaning, particularly in relation to delineations of gender. As street-trained breakers were enticed to join the world of professional ballet, this newly forged relationship was recast by dance promoters as a way to invigorate and “remasculinize” European dance, while young women simultaneously critiqued conventional masculinities through an appropriation of breakdance. These multiple and volatile histories influenced the first wave of hip hop films, and even structured the sleeper hit Flashdance (1983). This forgotten, ignored, and maligned cinema is not only an important aspect of hip hop history, but is also central to the histories of teen film, the postclassical musical, and even institutional dance. Kimberley Monteyne places these films within the wider context of their cultural antecedents and reconsiders the genre’s influence.

The Cambridge Companion to Hip-Hop

The Cambridge Companion to Hip-Hop
Title The Cambridge Companion to Hip-Hop PDF eBook
Author Justin A. Williams
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 370
Release 2015-02-12
Genre Music
ISBN 1107037468

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This Companion covers the hip-hop elements, methods of studying hip-hop, and case studies from Nerdcore to Turkish-German and Japanese hip-hop.

Hip-Hop (And Other Things)

Hip-Hop (And Other Things)
Title Hip-Hop (And Other Things) PDF eBook
Author Shea Serrano
Publisher Twelve
Total Pages 543
Release 2021-10-26
Genre Music
ISBN 1538730219

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HIP-HOP (AND OTHER THINGS) is about, as it were, rap, but also some other things. It's a smart, fun, funny, insightful book that spends the entirety of its time celebrating what has become the most dominant form of music these past two and a half decades. Tupac is in there. Jay Z is in there. Missy Elliott is in there. Drake is in there. Pretty much all of the big names are in there, as are a bunch of the smaller names, too. There's art from acclaimed illustrator Arturo Torres, there are infographics and footnotes; there's all kinds of stuff in there. Some of the chapters are serious, and some of the chapters are silly, and some of the chapters are a combination of both things. All of them, though, are treated with the care and respect that they deserve. HIP-HOP (AND OTHER THINGS) is the third book in the (And Other Things) series. The first two—Basketball (And Other Things) and Movies (And Other Things)—were both #1 New York Times bestsellers.

Hip Hop Heresies

Hip Hop Heresies
Title Hip Hop Heresies PDF eBook
Author Shanté Paradigm Smalls
Publisher NYU Press
Total Pages 216
Release 2022-06-28
Genre Music
ISBN 1479808202

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"This is the first book-length project to examine the relationship between blackness, queerness, and hip hop. Using aesthetics as its organizing lens, Hip Hop Heresies attends to the ways that hip hop cultural production in New York City from the 1970s through the first fifteen years of the 21st century produced hip hop cultural products (film, visual art, and music) that offer "queer articulations" of race, gender, and sexuality that are contrary to hegemonic ideas and representations of those categories in hip hop production, as well as in writing about hip hop culture"--