Description

Book Synopsis
Msia Kibona Clark examines some of Africa’s biggest hip-hop scenes and shows how hip-hop helps us understand specifically African realities. A tribute to a genre and its artists, Hip-Hop in Africa details the spread of hip-hop culture in Africa and pushes the study of music and diaspora in critical new directions.

Trade Review

This Pan-African project is a thoughtful synthesis of the various
hip-hop making practices in African communities across the continent. It is highly
recommended for popular cultural scholars, hip-hop heads, and the cultural
producers in hip-hop communities. Indeed, Clark’s book reads in an accessible
manner which demonstrates her critical understanding of how academic
knowledge production is often confined behind academic walls and trapped
in dense academese rendering it inaccessible to the communities we make
knowledge with….
This project cements Clark’s commitment to publicly engaged scholarship and to
ensuring that writing about hip-hop is also part of the cultural production of the
community.

* Contemporary Journal of African Studies *
“Remarkably well-conceived … [Clark] adeptly covers a wide range of issues in African hip-hop—its role in political protest, the rise of feminist MCs and the effects of migration on cultural production—without forgoing depth in favor of breadth.…There [are] no bling or fast cars here but the stories within shine bright, illuminating the variegated and effusive scenes across Africa.“ * Songlines *
“What Clark does especially well is creating a dialogue in each chapter, giving…insight into how each factor, such as language, is approached differently across different parts of the continent, but then also how they come into dialogue with each other and present different [viewpoints] to the rest of the world. It’s an incredibly rich and dense text, just packed with information, but also very accessible and easy to understand.” * Scratched Vinyl *
“This is a very important [study]. To say that I learned a lot about the artists and their music … and the intricacies of hip hop music and culture would be an understatement; I came away having totally enhanced my own pop culture credibility. I have heard Msia Clark speak to her work, and she brings to the story of today’s hip-hop storytellers the passion of the historian who must give voice to a phenomenon, a movement, a future that we must recognize and appreciate.”

HipHop in Africa Prophets of the City and

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    A Hardback by Msia Kibona Clark

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      View other formats and editions of HipHop in Africa Prophets of the City and by Msia Kibona Clark

      Publisher: Ohio University Press
      Publication Date: 30/04/2018
      ISBN13: 9780896803183, 978-0896803183
      ISBN10: 089680318X
      Also in:
      Cultural studies

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Msia Kibona Clark examines some of Africa’s biggest hip-hop scenes and shows how hip-hop helps us understand specifically African realities. A tribute to a genre and its artists, Hip-Hop in Africa details the spread of hip-hop culture in Africa and pushes the study of music and diaspora in critical new directions.

      Trade Review

      This Pan-African project is a thoughtful synthesis of the various
      hip-hop making practices in African communities across the continent. It is highly
      recommended for popular cultural scholars, hip-hop heads, and the cultural
      producers in hip-hop communities. Indeed, Clark’s book reads in an accessible
      manner which demonstrates her critical understanding of how academic
      knowledge production is often confined behind academic walls and trapped
      in dense academese rendering it inaccessible to the communities we make
      knowledge with….
      This project cements Clark’s commitment to publicly engaged scholarship and to
      ensuring that writing about hip-hop is also part of the cultural production of the
      community.

      * Contemporary Journal of African Studies *
      “Remarkably well-conceived … [Clark] adeptly covers a wide range of issues in African hip-hop—its role in political protest, the rise of feminist MCs and the effects of migration on cultural production—without forgoing depth in favor of breadth.…There [are] no bling or fast cars here but the stories within shine bright, illuminating the variegated and effusive scenes across Africa.“ * Songlines *
      “What Clark does especially well is creating a dialogue in each chapter, giving…insight into how each factor, such as language, is approached differently across different parts of the continent, but then also how they come into dialogue with each other and present different [viewpoints] to the rest of the world. It’s an incredibly rich and dense text, just packed with information, but also very accessible and easy to understand.” * Scratched Vinyl *
      “This is a very important [study]. To say that I learned a lot about the artists and their music … and the intricacies of hip hop music and culture would be an understatement; I came away having totally enhanced my own pop culture credibility. I have heard Msia Clark speak to her work, and she brings to the story of today’s hip-hop storytellers the passion of the historian who must give voice to a phenomenon, a movement, a future that we must recognize and appreciate.”

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