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Nigerian Hip-Hop: Race, Knowledge, and the Poetics of Resistance [Pehme köide]

(Assistant Professor, Department of English, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 231x156x20 mm, kaal: 490 g, 44 b/w illustrations, 1 table
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Mar-2026
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0197782035
  • ISBN-13: 9780197782033
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 231x156x20 mm, kaal: 490 g, 44 b/w illustrations, 1 table
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Mar-2026
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0197782035
  • ISBN-13: 9780197782033
Teised raamatud teemal:
Nigerian, or Naija, hip-hop has existed for close to 45 years, and throughout its rich history has been influenced by not only imperialist media flows but also enduring discourses of African anti-colonialism and pan-Africanism and the long cultural traffic between Africa and the African diaspora. In Nigerian Hip-Hop, Tosin Gbogi draws upon close readings of lyrics and other media and oral interviews with more than fifty artists to engage fully with the culture on its own terms, examining questions lying at the intersection of rap poetics, race, knowledge, and popular culture. Troubling the conventional paradigm in which hip-hop in Nigeria stands squarely for imperialist machinery, he directs attention to the culture's provocative meditations on the afterlives of slavery and colonialism. Gbogi tracks these meditations across a wide range of sources, including lyrics, music videos, cover arts, liner notes, photographs, social media, archival materials, and oral interviews. Placing these sources in conversation with one another, he examines them closely for what they reveal about the contemporary trajectories of African popular culture and youth resistance.

The first comprehensive and systematic study of Nigerian hip-hop--one of the world's oldest and most vibrant of such scenes--this book attends to the literary forms, the density of ideas, historical encounters, ideological struggles, and the lively internal debates that have animated the culture for more than four decades. In highlighting these, Gbogi engages with a broad array of topics and themes, including those having to do with race, ethnicity, class, gender, language, media and popular culture, youth cultures, and poetry.

In this book, Tosin Gbogi draws on the rich history of Nigerian hip-hop, and of the long cultural traffic between Africa and the African diaspora more broadly, to expand our understanding of the culture's central contributions. The first comprehensive and systematic study of Nigerian hip-hop--one of the world's oldest and most vibrant of such scenes--this book attends to the literary forms, the density of ideas, historical encounters, ideological struggles, and the lively internal debates that have animated the culture for more than four decades.

Arvustused

Nigerian Hip-Hop is not only the first sustained examination of hip-hop in Nigeria, but it also teaches us much about African popular culture, decolonial resistance, and the complex politics of identity and knowledge that youth negotiate through their participation within the culture. Methodologically rigorous and theoretically sophisticated, Gbogi engages the 'culture creators' on their own terms, analyzing their cultural production with the interdisciplinary lens that their art both demands and deserves. The book is bristling with insights that reveal youth music, art, culture, and language as sites of resistance, memory, and futures. * H. Samy Alim, co-editor of Global Linguistic Flows and Freedom Moves *

Introduction
1: The Experimental Years: Race, Crossings, and the Early Routes of Nigerian
Hip-Hop
2: Rhyming Together: Community, Aesthetic Transformations, and Diasporic
Flows
3: Roots, Return, Reconnection
4: Realness, Language, and Decolonial Meta-Rap
5: "Speaking from a Prison in Africa That You Built": Nation and Empire in
Nigerian Hip-Hop
6: Women on the Mic: Gender, Race, and the Reclamation of the Stage
7: "These Are the Black Years": Poetry of Praise, Panegyrics of Race
Conclusion
Tosin Gbogi is Assistant Professor in the Department of English at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities.