hip hop subculture essay

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    Throughout the decades, music has gone from early rock and roll to popular rappers like Drake and other rappers heard today. Therefore, when the music changes, so does the theme and the lyrics that are contained in these songs. Many of the rappers and artists today primarily focus on three things: violence, drugs , and sex. For example, an analysis of around 350 rap songs were reviewed and around 60 percent of the songs contained violent themes and images and 45 percent contained references to drugs

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    Yes, it is both unrealistic and unfair to put hip-hop on a pedestal and assume that it would completely reform the economy of a community, but its influence was -and still is- deeply rooted and powerful enough to have the ability to bring positive changes to the black community in the United States. Hip-hop has brought negative changes to the community so it is definitely not far-fetched to think that it has the ability to bring positive changes. Hip Hop was a distraction from the real problems and

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    Youth and hip-hop culture plays a significant role in our society and can influence one another. Hip-hop has developed as a pure and original cultural expression of African American youth in 1970’s. Hip-hop and its culture come from a creative self-expression that comes from a struggle of living in declining cities. Since then, hip-hop has expanded and has given a voice to any youths with all diversities and background today. However, mainstream hip-hop promotes a lifestyle of materialism, which

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    music because I felt as though the music was poisoning to our minds. Contrary to what I was saying, these were not my true feelings. The only reason I said these things was because I followed the thoughts and opinion of the much older people of the hip hop audience. I wanted to be all high and mighty as those individuals and show that I too also enjoyed the rap era from the 1990s to early 2013. Although I preached about how bad this new rap era is and the kind of music I listen to, no one pictured me

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    Demonizing women - Sexual advertisement v. Hip Hop culture Two articles address a great social issue of showing sex and violence to demonize women. Both use similar strategies to convey their message. The first article is titled "Two ways a woman can get hurt": Advertising and violence, by Jean Kilbourne, displays the potent effect of negative advertisements, showing women as a sex object. This article shows using vulgar and sexual advertisement men as dominant and irresistible whereas women as

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    Rap music is a music genre that has been around since the late 1970s and early 1980s in New York City and was pioneered by a Jamaican immigrant by the name of DJ Kool Herc, who started transporting simple rap songs at his parties, which was also by the Jamaican tradition of toasting. Rap has been popular since the 1990s as artists like Biggie Smalls, Tupac, and N.W.A were all iconic rap artists and P. Diddy and Dr. Dre were well known producers at the time and they still are as of today. Rap has

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    Hip Hop Culture Analysis

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    geography within Hip Hop. Black men have been denied spaces within general society and have found solace within Rap/Hip Hop. With the exclusion of black men from economic and social opportunities and hegemonic masculinity, black men have dominated the Hip Hop genre. Through Hip Hop, black men have an open space to describe their forgotten hoods, lack of opportunities and violence that results from economic disadvantages. Due to black men dominating the new genre, masculinity and Hip Hop have been linked

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    that these songs encourage healthy ethical messages to society due to the fact that almost everyone is exposed to music these days. Often times, especially in Hip-Hop music we see how the portrayal of women is usually a negative one. I’m sure that you’ve seen at least one song where women appear subject to men and appear as sex tools. Many hip hop artists, through their music (whether meant to or not), emphasize how women should be seen as tools for pleasure and they lack to show more positive attributes

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    How would you feel as a black women, ..you were looked at as nothing more than a prop? That you were only there to entertain and for pleasure.. Our consciousness about who black women are, is being limited to the dehumanization that the hip-hop culture centers in on women. Twerking, busting it wide, and dropping it like it’s hot is not at all what black women are equaled out to do. These misogynistic misrepresentation of black women is commonly seen in media culture music videos that provide the

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    Taking a Look at Hip Hop

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    business If it got where it started So we all gather here for the dearly departed” (NAS, Hip hop is dead), Since the 1920s, America has been the setting for a progressive "Black Arts Movement." This African-American cultural movement has taken shape in various genres, gaining mass appeal, this cultural arts movement has stayed set upon its original purpose and direction, by aiding in cultural identity awareness. Hip Hop is a genre of music that has really grown the last couple of decades. Its increased

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