Hip Hop Heresies - (Postmillennial Pop) by Shanté Paradigm Smalls (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- Winner of the 2022-2023 New York City Book Awards!
- About the Author: Shanté Paradigm Smalls is Associate Professor in the Department of Art & Public Policy at New York University.
- 216 Pages
- Music, Genres & Styles
- Series Name: Postmillennial Pop
Description
About the Book
"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"--Book Synopsis
Winner of the 2022-2023 New York City Book Awards!
SPECIAL MENTION, 2023 IASPM Book Prize, given by the International Association for the Study of Popular Music SHORTLISTED, 2023 Ralph J. Gleason Book Award, given by the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame/Clive Davis InstituteUnearths the queer aesthetic origins of NYC hip hop Hip Hop Heresies centers New York City as a space where vibrant queer, Black, and hip hop worlds collide and bond in dance clubs, schools, roller rinks, basketball courts, subways, and movie houses. Using this cultural nexus as the stage, Shanté Paradigm Smalls attends to the ways that hip hop cultural production in New York City from the 1970s through the early twenty-first century produced film, visual art, and music that offer queer articulations of race, gender, and sexuality. To illustrate New York City as a place of experimental aesthetic collaboration, Smalls brings four cultural moments to the forefront: the life and work of the gay Chinese American visual and graffiti artist Martin Wong, who brokered the relationship between New York City graffiti artists and gallery and museum spaces; the Brooklyn-based rapper-singer-writer-producer Jean Grae, one of the most prolific and underrated emcees of the last two decades; the iconic 1980s film The Last Dragon, which exemplifies the experimental and queer Black masculinity possible in early formal hip hop culture; and finally queer- and trans-identified hip hop artists and groups like BQE, Deepdickollective, and Hanifah Walidah, and the documentary Pick Up the Mic. Hip Hop Heresies transforms the landscape of hip hop scholarship, Black studies, and queer studies by bringing together these fields through the hermeneutic of aesthetics. Providing a guidepost for future scholarship on queer, trans, and feminist hip hop studies, Hip Hop Heresies takes seriously the work that New York City hip hop cultural production has done and will do, and advocates a form of hip hop that eschews authenticity in favor of performativity, bricolage, and pastiche.
Review Quotes
"Necessary and refreshing... Instead of treating hip-hop as antithetical to queerness, Hip Hop Heresies makes a compelling case for the 'queerness of hip-hop culture.'"-- "GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies"
"Serves as an intervention, a challenge to engage an underexplored aspect of Black urban culture by means of archival research and in-depth historical analyses. The voice of Smalls comes through most authoritatively in the parts of the text that explicitly express this historical impulse, including the sections that discuss the author's own involvement in hip hop culture - as singer, performer, and producer ... Hip Hop Heresies is a promising contribution to hip hop studies."-- "Journal of Popular Culture"
"Hip Hop Heresies: Queer Aesthetics in New York City arrives just in time as the first scholarly monograph focused on queer hip hop and as a much-needed intervention that sets the stage for ongoing scholarship."-- "Journal of Popular Music Studies"
"Finally (deep heavy sigh of relief, followed by loud cheers of 'yes, yesssss, y'all') we have a book about NYC hip-hop culture that is as queerly heretical as the genre itself. Challenging the cishetero masculinist narratives usually projected onto hip-hop culture, Shanté Paradigm Smalls beautifully and heretically mashes up Black aesthetics, queer aesthetics, and hip hop aesthetics. Hip Hop Heresies is poised to irrevocably change the parameters of hip-hop scholarship."-- "Alexander Ghedi Weheliye, Northwestern University"
"Quite simply a tour de force. Like Tricia Rose's classic Black Noise, this book is a field-defining game-changer. Challenging hip hop's traditional origin story, Smalls tears down, brick-by-brick, the well-worn narratives about the genre's relationship to blackness, masculinity, and heterosexuality. In innovative readings of film, visual art, and music, Smalls takes us into the formative spaces where people of all genders, sexualities and races co-mingle and co-create. In the process, Smalls constructs a new archive in which queer aesthetics, gender play, and categorical instability fuel hip hop's more transgressive tendencies. Highly readable, theoretically sophisticated, and utterly persuasive, Hip Hop Heresies is essential reading for hip hop fans and critics, as well as anyone interested in U.S. popular culture in the late 20th and early 21st centuries."-- "Cynthia A. Young, Pennsylvania State University"
"Whether looking at the various sharing and appreciation of other cultural ideals (Afro-Asian, for example) to the direct contributions of particular identities in seminal moments and waypoints within the culture, Hip Hop Heresies is a meaningful and powerful look into a history of Hip Hop that further cement the belief of Hip Hop's universal appeal, power, and influence on the world at large."--Mikal Amin Lee "The Counterbalance"
About the Author
Shanté Paradigm Smalls is Associate Professor in the Department of Art & Public Policy at New York University.Dimensions (Overall): 8.9 Inches (H) x 6.0 Inches (W) x .7 Inches (D)
Weight: .7 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 216
Series Title: Postmillennial Pop
Genre: Music
Sub-Genre: Genres & Styles
Publisher: New York University Press
Theme: Rap & Hip Hop
Format: Paperback
Author: Shanté Paradigm Smalls
Language: English
Street Date: June 28, 2022
TCIN: 91502177
UPC: 9781479808205
Item Number (DPCI): 247-25-1164
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Shipping details
Estimated ship dimensions: 0.7 inches length x 6 inches width x 8.9 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 0.7 pounds
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