Beats Rhymes and Life: What We Love and Hate about Hip-Hop by Kenji Jasper (Editor), Ytasha Womack (Editor), Robert Johnson (Photographer)

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  • Pub. Date: May 2007
  • 320pp
  • Sales Rank: 434,816
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2007
    • Publisher: Broadway Books
    • Format: Paperback, 320pp
    • Sales Rank: 434,816

    Synopsis

    Our generation made hip-hop. But hip-hop also made us. Why are suburban kids referring to their subdivision as “block”? Why has the pimp become a figure of male power? Why has dodging the feds become an act of honor long after one has made millions as a legitimate artist? What happens when fantasy does more harm than reality?—From the Introduction

    Hip-hop culture has been in the mainstream for years. Suburban teens take their fashion cues from Diddy and expect to have Three 6 Mafia play their sweet-sixteen parties. From the “Boogie Down Bronx” to the heartland, hip-hop’s influence is major. But has the movement taken a wrong turn? In Beats Rhymes and Life, hot journalists Kenji Jasper and Ytasha Womack have focused on what they consider to be the most prominent symbols of the genre: the fan, the turntable, the ice, the dance floor, the shell casing, the buzz, the tag, the whip, the ass, the stiletto, the (pimp’s) cane, the coffin, the cross, and the corner. Each is the focus of an essay by a journalist who skillfully dissects what their chosen symbol means to them and to the hip-hop community.The collection also features many original interviews with some of rap’s biggest stars talking candidly about how they connect to the culture and their fans. With a foreword by the renowned scholar Michael Eric Dyson, Beats Rhymes and Life is an innovative and daring look at the state of the hip-hop nation.

    School Library Journal

    Adult/High School Womack and Jasper have done an excellent job of collecting essays and opinions exploring and deconstructing hip-hop music, lyrics, and music-video imagery. Several selections examine hip-hop's seeming obsession with "bling," violence toward women, and glorification of drugs, questioning whether the artists are providing social commentary or adding to the problems by extolling the worst of inner-city life. Other essays, like the foreword by Michael Eric Dyson, remind readers of hip-hop's early connections with the Civil Rights Movement. The volume includes interviews with well-known performers such as Ludacris and Too $hort, as well as with Rob Marriot, cofounder of the hip-hop culture magazine XXL . Despite the contributions from a number of academics and high-minded cultural critics, the editors make this book accessible by keeping jargon to a minimum. Readers should be aware that this is not a history of the music like Jeff Chang's Can't Stop,Won't Stop (St. Martin's, 2005), but rather a collection that assumes that readers already know the big names and events. Smart fans of the art form will find a thoughtful, balanced volume that gives them the opportunity to think about the medium and make their own decisions about hip-hop's place in history.-Matthew L. Moffett, Pohick Regional Library, Burke, VA

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    Biography

    KENJI JASPER is a commentator for NPR and has written for The Source, XXL, VIBE, and more. He lives in Brooklyn. YTASHA WOMACK is an editor-at-large for Upscale and has written for the Chicago Tribune, Essence, VIBE, and more. She lives in Chicago.

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