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Hip hop and the university: the epistemologies of “street knowledge” and “book knowledge”

Faculty Advisor

Date

2020

Keywords

rap, hip hop, Kanye West, J. Cole, Method Man, academia, street knowledge

Abstract (summary)

While hip hop and the university appear to operate within radically different social (and socioeconomic) spheres, we nevertheless see increasing overlap between the two that demonstrates a mutual interest and perhaps desire between the two. With the rise of hip hop studies on the one hand and a remarkable array of hip hop songs and films that address the university space and/or university education on the other, these two discursive spheres produce knowledges that are both complementary and contradictory. By analyzing several texts—major academic works of hip hop scholarship; films on hip hop and the university, especially Method Man and Redman’s 2001 How High; and the rap oeuvres of Kanye West and J. Cole—this article examines the ways in which the epistemologies of hip hop and the university interact and conflict. By examining these texts, I show that academic epistemologies, or what I term “book knowledge,” inadvertently impose a hierarchical and colonizing frame on rap and hip hop, such as the practice of “close reading” rap as poetry. Instead, I argue that we can learn how to ethically inhabit and transform the university space by drawing from hip hop’s commitment to producing the radical, decolonial, and embodied practices of “street knowledge.”

Publication Information

Grewal, S. H. (2020). Hip Hop and the University: The Epistemologies of “Street Knowledge” and “Book Knowledge”. Journal of Popular Music Studies 27 August 2020; 32 (3): 73–97. https://doi.org/10.1525/jpms.2020.32.3.73

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Article

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