U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

The .gov means it’s official. Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

The site is secure. The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

  • Publications
  • Account settings

Preview improvements coming to the PMC website in October 2024. Learn More or Try it out now .

  • Advanced Search
  • Journal List
  • Front Sociol

Logo of frontsoc

Hip-hop, identity, and conflict: Practices and transformations of a metropolitan culture

Associated data.

The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author/s.

In this paper, I expose how it is possible to investigate the hip-hop culture on three levels of analysis—historical, semiotic, and phenomenological—precisely as theorized by Cohen (1997) for his study on modern subcultures. The analysis will focus on the hip-hop of the beginning, since the middle of the Seventies and Eighties in the United States, but then it will broaden to a reflection on its diffusion and re-invented, with particular reference to the interactions with the globalization and the changes occurred in contemporary metropolis. In this sense, considering hip-hop as a subculture in the following pages, I reflect (a) on the origin of rap music, its interrelation with the Afro-American culture and the concept of blackness which it conveys. Subsequently, I clarify (b) that the art of writing, in the form of Tag, and break dance have certificated the presence of young people from the United States outskirts, and then the passage to a precise historical moment. Finally, I try to demonstrate (c) that today, a different dimension of hip-hop is implemented, whose features have changed in parallel with the transformations that have affected the metropolis and the youth cultures. These last one are increasingly hybrid and involved in a recreational, market system, where the changing nature of hip-hop allows: its enormous success, with the domain of the musical market and other assimilation processes, such as clothing, which have contributed to its mutation in a global culture, some margins of autonomy.

Introduction and methodological note

In this paper, I expose how it is possible to investigate the hip-hop culture considering three levels of analysis—historical, structural-semiotic, and phenomenological—precisely as theorized by Cohen ( 1997 ) for his study on modern subcultures. The analysis will focus on the hip-hop of the beginning, since the middle of the Seventies and Eighties in the United States, but then it will broaden to a reflection on its diffusion and re-invented, with particular reference to the interactions with the globalization and the changes occurred in contemporary metropolis.

The English sociologist illustrates at a first level of analysis, the necessity to investigate the historical and social context where a group is rooted and develops. The structural and semiotic analysis refers to the means through which a culture reveals itself. The third level consists in an analysis of the way in which the subculture is actually experienced by its builders (Cohen, 1997 , p. 57–58).

This means that, from these conceptualizations, a study of hip-hop articulated in this way should necessarily include the following:

  • a reflection about geographical and territorial maps which have fostered its development (social, inter-ethnic ghettos);
  • the investigation of its rituals—the subject areas of rap, writing and breaking 1 ;
  • the analysis, as a whole, of the symbolic values and of the meaning that these articulations represent for the main subjects of this culture.

Considering hip-hop as a juvenil culture, in the following pages, I reflect on (a) the origin of rap music, its interrelation with the Afro-American culture and the concept of blackness which it conveys. Subsequently, I clarify (b) that the art of writing, in the form of Tag, and break dance have certificated the presence of young people from the U.S. outskirts and then the passage to a precise historical moment. Finally, I try to demonstrate (c) that today, a different dimension of hip-hop is implemented, whose features have changed in parallel with the transformations that have affected the metropolis and the youth cultures. These last one are increasingly hybrid and involved in a recreational market system, where the changing nature of hip-hop allows the followings:

  • its enormous success, with the domain of the musical market and other assimilation processes such as clothing, which have nevertheless contributed to a mutation of hip-hop in a global culture;
  • some margins of radicalism and autonomy.

The choice to propose a study of the hip-hop culture starting from British cultural studies is hereafter explained. Anglo-Saxon analysis allow us to afford the issue from a hybrid theoretical perspective, with a particular attention to the concepts of cultural resistance, symbolical conflict, identity, and territory. Moreover, the development of the aforementioned subject, declined as follows, makes it possible to intertwine, in the second part of this paper, the different levels of analysis proposed by Phil Cohen with other more contemporary theoretical approaches, related to post-cultural studies. This provides a wider interpretative dimension from an evolutionary perspective about hip-hop.

The same Cohen, referring to specific thematic elements, as reported above, in “Subcultural Conflict and Working Class Community” (1997), states that the emergence of symbolical systems (“plastic” and “infrastructural,” in other words clothing and music, jargon, and rituals) represents the distinctive character of street groups.

Through these subsystems, the subcultural groups transfer intrafamilial conflicts outside the domestic environment, in a public dimension, where it is possible to negotiate and enhance their own identity. This occurs as a consequence of the collapse of a model of integration in the slums and the underlying subcommunitarian structure which forges the collective identity.

Through the hip-hop culture, these teenagers and young adults have used new communicational codes to react against the limits imposed on their condition. The resources they possess to affirm their identity are as follows: linguistic agitation, graffiti, symbolisms, and corporeality.

The organization of these elements, writes John Clarke, together with “activities and outlooks, which produce an organized group-identity in the form and shape of a coherent and distinctive way of ‘being-in-the-world”’ (Clarke et al., 2003 , p. 54) establishes what Paul Willis has defined as homology (Willis, 2003 , p. 106). The “homological relationship” between the subjective experience of the group, its values, its practices, and the use of objects evokes therefore a precise lifestyle, which I shall try to analyze below.

Rap, blackness, and the ghetto language

The hip-hop culture of the ‘70s produces a severe conflict outside the original group—preserving by this way the relationships and social life of the group from destructive shockwaves—and one internal, oedipal, based on the affirmation of a cultural difference, as was for some classical subcultures (Cohen, 1997 , p. 57 sgg.). Reflecting on the outward conflict, the hip-hop 2 has thus generated a tension starting from the politicization of slums, through rap music used as a fundamental condition to objectify its identity in the space-time dimension of contemporary societies.

George Lapassade and Philippe Rousselot in their book Rap il furor del dire , from the very first pages, define rap not only as a music genre, but also “inside the ghettos where it was generated, it was soon associated to a more general attitude” (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 13). In fact, dress styles, social stances, frequentation of places revolve around rap music, “and […] also tags, graffiti covering the walls of the city and the metro cars. This is what is described as ‘hip-hop culture’. Without this culture, rap would not exist. The first holds the second one and not vice versa” (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 13).

The two authors, going further and deeper, illustrate the etymology of the word rap, which

comes from the American to rap , which means to talk, to tell, to “blurt out.” Some American philologists (Chapman, 1987) indicate a more slangy origin and associate it to the plausible abbreviation of rapid, or repartee, meaning “back and forth,” “cut and thrust” (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 13).

The North American rap is permeated by a complex system of cultural and ethnic ties. Its roots embrace the Jamaican Toastin, the Last Poets, the Soul, and Funk music (ivi, p. 14 sgg.) On the one hand, rap is generally considered as an emancipatory reaction to the anonymity assigned to Afro-American groups by the industrial modernity. On the other hand, lyrics in rap music have been the device through which the local identity has been forged and the “Jamaican popular music has represented the somehow unavoidable spark […] after the years of black activism in America” (ivi, p. 14). Dick Hebdige writes that

rap did for poor blacks in America in the 1980s what reggae had done for the “sufferers” in Jamaica a decade earlier. It got them noticed again and it helped to forge a sense of identity and pride within the local community. Like reggae, the music later found an international audience. Additionally then, the sense of identity and pride that went along with rap became available to other people who listened to the music (Hebdige, 2004 , p. 223–224).

Furthermore, by pointing out the link among rap, reggae, and the common social environment which encouraged its birth and its following development, Hebdige refers:

both reggae and rap also grew out of city slum environments. Rap started in the South Bronx of New York, which had been a mainly black and Hispanic ghetto for decades. By 1930, nearly a quarter of the people who lived there were West Indian immigrants. Additionally, most of the Spanish speakers living in the Bronx nowadays either came originally from Caribbean islands such as Puerto Rico and Cuba or are the children of Caribbean immigrants. The Cubans began arriving in the Bronx in the 1930s and 1940s and the Puerto Rican community goes back even further. There are now three million Puerto Ricans living in New York—as many as live in Puerto Rico itself. The Bronx had never been prosperous. But in the 1960s, it went into a sudden decline and by the end of the decade, it had become the poorest, toughest neighborhood in the whole of New York City (ivi, p. 224).

Rap is also and mostly connected to the “black problem.” In the Seventies, “Martin Luther King's and Black Panthers' fights seemed to be bearing fruits, and promised to the black community a brighter future.” (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 44). If “a black middle class started to join the American middle class,” aligning to the American way for life (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 44), the slums of Bronx, Harlem, and Wax highlighted by contrast the ambiguity of the economic integration and of the Nixon and Reagan administrations' social policies. The persistent lack of assets and opportunities to access the life standards corresponding to the American way for life leads the inhabitants of the slums, young people over all, to assume a reactive identity toward society.

Rap music, as well as describing the daily life of the ghetto, discloses the need for affirmation. The rap of the beginning is not an entertainment but a protest music (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 48 sgg.) through which an opposition and a conflict against the American society can be expressed (the lyric of GrandMaster flash, entitled The Message and recorded in 1982, is significant in this respect). In some way, rap “becomes the chance to take back the word for those social groups condemned to extraneity, silence and desert.” (Petrelli, 1992 , p. 87). It is an instrument which enables the subject from the slums to regain the power to speak, right that media, whose message is always unidirectional, “take off from him” (Petrelli, 1992 , p. 87). Here—writes Stefano Petrelli—there is a word which hides, that of media and the mainstream. Additionally, there is […] one which unveils and consequently cures. Rap, by disclosing the existence of an underground social world, “treats” the impossibility of a live, authentic word, in the metropolis of media (Petrelli, 1992 , p. 87).

These further developments frame rap even more deeply in its original culture, the blackness:

this blackness is the unique and not shareable historical experience of an entire people; it is part of the black culture of America […]. Going back to the history and the American black cultures, it seems to be universally accepted that this people have shaped two different weapons to resist the oppression and the disgraces. One is the spirituality and one is the language. From the one hand, the hope and the strength; from the other hand, the verbal agitation and the code (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 68).

The rap of the beginnings—Seventies and Eighties—is deeply rooted in a blackness based on the biblical hope and the black activism (many texts of Public Enemy, Ice-T, and other artists will describe the life of the ghetto and will resume the unfinished fight of Martin Luther King and the Black Muslims, ivi, p. 45).

In rap music, the main role is played by the language. This is not only a way to communicate and express, but represents the attempt to put a strain on the cultural hegemony of the ruling class. Antonio Gramsci used the term hegemony

to refer to the moment when a ruling class is able, not only to coerce a subordinate class to conform to its interests, but to exert a “hegemony” or “total social authority” over subordinate classes. This involves the exercise of a special kind of power—the power to frame alternatives and contain opportunities, to win and shape consent, so that the granting of legitimacy to the dominant classes appears not only “spontaneous” but natural and normal (Clarke et al., 2003 , p. 38).

Compliance and social order are reproduced not only through the organization, the management of relationships, and social interactions, but also through marks. Language, as well as objects, has a specific social connotation and is charged with cultural meaning (ivi, p. 54–55).

Rap was conceived in the ghetto, for the ghetto (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 141). To fully understand the aesthetic of rap, we should analyze

blues lyrics and the ancient tradition of toastin' —an aspect of the oral Afro-American tradition consisting in telling a kind of epic story from the street with rhymes and all sorts of improvisation—and of signifyin '—the activity of the continuous playing with semantic neighborhoods, rhymes, and alliterations, thus creating linguistic double meanings with the often unconscious aim of deconstructing the mainstream language, to impose one's own. (u.net, 2006 , p. 65).

Dozens, or the “linguistic obscenity,” the “rhymed sneer,” the “high school prank” which in blocks have similarly been the core of social relations and have organized social roles within the peer group, have their own characterization. The rap vocabulary is provided by the ghetto and the hip-hop culture (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 79). This model of communication, claimed by Rap Brown and the Black Panthers, recalls the double essence of language, that of signified and of signifier. To analyze rap music means to observe the key relations of domination and subordination “in which these configurations stand; to the processes of incorporation and resistance which define the cultural dialectic between them; and to the institutions which transmit and reproduce ‘the culture’ (i.e., the dominant culture) in its dominant or ‘hegemonic’ form” (Clarke et al., 2003 , p. 13).

The linguistic transfiguration “consists in a series of practices […] through which a person in a subordinate position tries to manage or modify the existent relation of power for his or her own benefit,” with the aim of “transforming the existing order of things or defining an open space within that order” (Pitti, 2018 , p. 6).

Black culture, with its blues and popular music, has always cared about oratory and rap, in summary, represents the consequence of this folk tradition (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 73–74): “from the first rural chants, to gospel and blues, there has always been a double level of interpretation, one for white people, who were pleased to listen to the ‘bravo nigger’, and one for black people who could understand the message” (ivi, p. 76).

A political, existential message will use oratory and new aesthetic values, like writing.

Writing and identity. From rumble to bombing

Hip-hop presents itself as a strong antagonist philosophy developed in the ghettos of U.S metropolis (Barile, 2019 , p. IX). From the beginning, we have seen that the leading force of rap music represented the distinguishing mark of this culture, whose set of languages includes, besides Rap (or Mc'ing), Writing, Dj'ing (or Turntablism), and break dance. The art of writing has a significant development with the Rats in the Street to whom Malcolm X refers in some of his famous speeches pronounced between the end of the Fifties and the beginning of the Sixties (Naldi, 2020 , p. 48). Taki 183, Cornbread, Julio 204, just to mention the pioneers of writing (Castleman, 1982 , 2004 ), or better still of “lettering” to be more precise. (ivi, p. 49), are among the first Rats in the Street who choose to assume a new identity to record their passage through scratched signs on the wall (Naldi, 2020 , p. 48).

These processes of individual and social identity building, referred to writing, are present in one of the first European reflection on the phenomenon proposed by Jacky Lafortune, who outlines:

le tag est une signature individuelle réalisée avec un lettrage particulier. Le 21 juillet 1971, le New York Times consacre son premier reportage au tag. Les exploits du taggeur surnommé Taki 183 y sont relatés. Comme Roger Mettalic Avau le remarque, “le New York Times en tête donne un sérieux coup de pouce [aux taggeurs] en parlant d'eux. Une nouvelle forme de graffiti était née [...]. Quoi de plus facile, la nuit tombée de se glisser dans un dépôt du subway et de reproduire son tag en grands caractères sur les rames? Des centaines de tags vont ainsi déferler [...]. On entre de plain-pied dans l'ère'du moi je', le désir de sortir de l'anonymat [...]. Ce qui différencie le tag du graffiti soixante-huitard [en Europe], c'est qu'il s'agit, non plus d'une revendication mais d'une affirmation” (Lafortune, 1993 , p. 74).

Also according to Petrelli, with the Tag, the writer develops a presence on his own. In fact, this “graphic and linguistic explosion” (Naldi, 2020 , p. 48), reflected on the increasing occupation of portions of urban territory—particularly in the outskirts—offers the possibility to express and perceive oneself as an active subject:

[tags can be seen] as an attempt—made by the author—to Become Visible in a metropolis whose social politics, and cultural practices, tend to make invisible even wider social groups. It is not only an economical, social, cultural marginalization: it is a physical one. It is physically that people in the Hispanic or Afro-American outskirts in the United States […] perceive this exclusion. They, […], feel that today, the action of mass media, which produce signs and therefore of meaning, is relevant – without foreseeing their presence. Against this kind of production, tags [impose] themselves as a signature-presence (Petrelli, 1992 , p. 87).

Young people from the outskirts, excluded from the educational and work system, are in search of redemption. Thus, they “try to establish their own identity developing a culture of the negative. The positive values of mainstream culture are therefore distorted and inverted to better fit in a philosophy of dissent and protest” (Gatti, 1983 , p. 136).

The search for a sense of identity is achieved in the concept of gang, which, in the Seventies in the US, was already growing to include hundreds of young members, whose main activity revolves around the turf , the “territory under their dominion in a constant need for defense and expansion” (Gatti, 1983 , p. 135). According to Gatti

The gang is the collective reply to the misery and the troubles of the so-called “high-risk neighborhoods,” the urban areas with the highest crime rates, overpopulation, child mortality rate, and epidemics (ivi, p. 136).

The control over the territory exerted by the gang, in legislative (the law of the strongest), economic (illegal activities), and cultural terms (Afro-American, Hispanic, Italians, etc.), is implemented through the involvement in violent physical confrontations

or gang war, an activity which was even feared by the gang leaders […], the only way to gain respect for the other gangs. To increase one's individual reputation, there is the fair one , the loyal fight between two selected members of rival gangs [loyal because it is not possible to use weapons or any help from their fellows] (ivi, p. 136).

Nevertheless, it is with the first tags realized by a young of Greek origins, Demetrius aka Taki 183 (in 1971)—the numeric code refers to his house number—that the phenomenon of the gangs, the system of symbols and signifiers which mostly inspired the action of the Turf, assumes a new form:

in the new era opened by Taki 183, the gang war is no more called rumble, but a cross-out, an erasure war, not implying weapons but cans of spray paint. It is no longer the stronger or more popular gang to win, but the one writing more and better. The gash perceived as a war declaration consists in smearing other gangs' graffiti. The reply of the enemy triggers a conflict, which can last for weeks or entire months (ivi, p. 138).

Tags become for young writers the opportunity to be noticed, to move and escape from their turf, alone or together with the gang. “From the poorest outskirts, hordes of young people invade the city center and hit each train and stop with their spray paint, their enormous brushes and their guerrilla warfare techniques” (ivi, p. 137).

According to Castleman ( 1982 ), the elements in common between the art of writing and the phenomenon of gangs are to be searched in the practice of illegal activities, which require ability, skills, and practical knowledge; but also in the use of heteronyms to escape the repression of the police, and most of all, they share the power to affirm their identity (in the case of graffiti by infringing on the private or public property).

In a few years, thousands of young people “attracted by the power of ubiquity” (Gatti, 1983 , p. 137) hit, with a bombing action, hundreds of train cars, and metro stations. As time goes by, with an extraordinary expansion, both quantitative and qualitative, the first tags become a genuine urban art, with different forms and styles:

so tags, born from acronyms and signatures, thus as a form of writing , become real and autonomous artistic forms, complex compositions planned and then realized (pieces). Letters dilate in space and fill in color creating large-scale images ( masterpieces ). Characters ( block letters ) swell up ( bubble style ), acquire an additional dimension ( 3d style ), and finally loose their function becoming deliberately unreadable shapes ( wild style ) (Dal Lago and Giordano, 2018 , p. 39).

An important individual and collective participation is balanced by a sensational reaction of displeasure on the part of the institutions, which conceive graffiti as a mere act of vandalism. The war against graffiti, inaugurated by Lindsay, the mayor of New York city, will last for decades and will cost the community several hundred million dollars (Castleman, 2004 , p. 22 sgg.; Mansbach, 2013 ). Only in the first Seventies, the police arrested more than 1,500 young people, most of all minors from the suburbs. Anyway, the years when Taki becomes a popular hero, and thousands of his peers follow his example, are the “exciting time of the hip-hop culture,” linked to the Afro-American and Latinos' claims, “in other words to the attempts of taking the floor from the voiceless in the American society of the time” (Dal Lago and Giordano, 2018 , p. 38). The war against graffiti can then be interpreted as a pretext to contain the demands of generations of excluded, articulated through rap music, writing and, as we will analyze in the next paragraph, also through dance, with break dance. About this war against the entire hip-hop culture, Mansbach remarks:

those stakes become clearer when one examines law enforcement's public profiling of graffiti writers. They were described as “black, brown, or other, in that order,” and vilified as sociopaths, drug addicts, and monsters. This was a fight over public space, and we would do well to remember that at the time the fight began, teenagers were also being arrested for break dancing in subway stations, and throwing un-permitted parties in the asphalt schoolyards of the Bronx. Taken collectively, these three activities also represent the birth of hip-hop, the single most influential subculture created in this or any country in the last half-century (Mansbach, 2013 ).

Break to dance. styles, fashion, mainstream

If on the one hand, hip-hop culture “has found in urban spaces a fundamental place of production and reproduction since the beginning,” then on the other hand, some areas of the city “have been deeply influenced by hip-hop practices and its performance.” Owing to the fact that

the city is recorded in rhymes and infiltrates in block parties , hip-hop snakes the corners of the streets, is inscribed on the walls, and re-signifies the spaces: a biunivocal relation in which none of the two directions can be neglected (Giubilaro and Pecorelli, 2019 , p. 24).

This re-signification of the urban space, about which the authors speak, is also part of the reflection of Gatti, who focuses on the places sharing break dance, writing, and rap music as ways of expression. Breaking requires a public arena, as well as “other forms of youth culture – writes Gatti. Differently from other dances, it wasn't born in night-club, but in the street, in the park and in the metro station, of course” (Gatti, 1983 , p. 141).

We have abundantly explained (above) that the hip-hop culture, through its disciplines, originates from a need for subjectivation and participation. The transfer in the spare time context of those pleasures forbidden in institutional places (school and work) is a reply to a specific social and economic condition, as the consequence of a structural violence. Hip-hop is a means to bring the knowledge, or “self-awareness,” cultural independence, and autonomy to the surface. It is the search for a political collocation, aimed at weakening the prevailing power relations, together with rap, street style (graffiti art), body language (break dance) to become the mouthpiece of new individualities and a social status, otherwise denied.

Like a graffiti artist makes use of his name to build an identity, at the same way the breaker uses his body—outlines Martha Cooper. “Break dance is a genuine celebration of flexibility and sensuality of the male teenager body.” The speed of movements and the smoothness of drawings are essential both in breaking and in graffiti art. What matters is mostly the degree of difficulty. For this reason, like in graffiti and rap music, breaking is an ever-changing form of art. The purpose is, in fact, the development of new techniques and styles to overcome the others and affirm one's supremacy. What is at stake is the social position in the community, which often represents for the young inhabitant of the ghetto everything he owns. (ivi, p. 141).

If through bombing, it is possible to exorcize the rumble, break dance avoids the reference to bombing with the individual and collective involvement in creative works, instead of criminal activities (Cristante, 1983 , p. 37). In fact, according to Holman ( 2004 ), “the first real breakers were the gang members of Black gangs in the Bronx in the late 60s, early 70s. These guys did a dance called the Good Foot, from James Brown's record of the same name. The Good Foot was the first freestyle dance that incorporated moves involving drops and spins and resembled the beginnings of breaking” (ivi, p. 36). So, the “acrobatic and athletic ritual embeds some elements of ballet and fight, becoming an artistic substitute of a physical confrontation” (Gatti, 1983 , p. 141).

With the break dancing phenomenon, exploded in the Eighties and Nineties, the B-boys (or Fly-Girl) acquire a visibility (also in the media), mostly identifying in a process of stylistic creation, or in the rearrangement and re-contextualization of objects and communicating “new meanings, inside a system of values which already includes connotations sedimented from the origin and connected to those objects” (Clarke, 2003 , p. 205). By expropriating and re-appropriating in this way cultural meanings (Clarke et al., 2003 , p. 76), the B-boys were used to wear “suits, sport shoes, caps, chains, and ornaments [like rappers]: a clear sign of fetishist re-appropriation of an item which used to be read as an expression of the cultural subordination of the ‘black nation’ since colonialism” (Barile, 2019 , p. IX).

Style objectifies the image that the group has of itself. It is clear therefore why the subcultural group is interested in a certain kind of objects and not in others.

In this respect, Clarke writes:

The important point here is that the group must be able to recognize itself in the more or less repressed potential meanings of particular symbolic objects. This requires that the object in question must have the “objective possibility” of reflecting the particular values and concerns of the group in question as one among the range of potential meanings that it could hold. It also requires that the group self-consciousness is sufficiently developed for its members to be concerned to recognize themselves in the range of symbolic objects available. This developed self-consciousness both in terms of its content (their own self-image, etc.) and in terms of its orientation toward symbolic objects is the means through which the style is generated. The selection of the objects through which the style is generated is then a matter of the homologies between the group's self-consciousness and the possible meanings of the available objects. (Clarke, 2003 , p. 179).

To the uptown culture, the first name given to hip-hop—being born in Uptown Manhattan—was often associated with the so-called sky fashion, the use of glasses, coats, and ski hats (u.net, 2006 , p. 41). This clothing, originally very expensive but in use by under-class people thanks to subjective intuitions, caught the attention of fashion magazines (such as, among others, East Village Eye).

At the same time, in the middle of the Eighties, an increasing interest from the part of mainstream media was mostly addressed to break dance dancers. Sally Banes comments:

although breaking is the newest part of hip-hop culture, it's the part that has made hip-hop, a media obsession. Then, 5 years ago, the only people who had ever heard of breaking were the kids in New York's ghettos who did it. They didn't even have a definite name for the form—they sometimes called it “breaking,” but they also referred to it as “rocking down,” “b-boy,” or just “that kind of dancing you do to rap music.” By 1980—when the form had already been around for a few years—they weren't even very interested in it anymore. This kind of dancing was a passing fad, they felt, that would soon be replaced by roller disco. But history was to prove them wrong. Not since the twist, in the early sixties, has a dance craze so captured the attention of the media (Banes, 2004 , p. 13).

Although long, we report another quote from Banes, which provides a clearer idea about the impact of break dance in cultural industry and entertainment. This suggests the beginning of an influence of globalization on the hip-hop culture:

By 1984, only a hermit could not have known about breaking. It had arrived, not only in the United States but also in Canada, Europe, and Japan. Breaking had been featured in the 1983 Hollywood film Flashdance , the independent hip-hop musical film Wild Style , and the documentary Style Wars (which aired on PBS), served as the inspiration for the 1984 films Breakin ' and Beat Street , and was rumored to be the subject of fifteen forthcoming Hollywood movies. Countless how to books and videos had hit the market. Breaking had been spotlighted on national news shows, talk shows, and ads for Burger King, Levi's, Pepsi-Cola, Coca-Cola, and Panasonic. In total, one hundred break dancers heated up the closing ceremonies of the 1984 summer Olympics in Los Angeles. In addition, Michael Jackson had given the form national currency. Breaking made the cover of Newsweek in 1984. Newspapers all over the country regularly carried stories on its latest ups and downs. The paradox emerged, as you flipped the pages of the Washington Post or the Los Angeles Times , that break dancers who would come up in the ghetto were banned from city streets and shopping malls for causing disturbances and attracting undesirable crowds, while at the same time, middle-class housewives and executives could learn to break dance in their spare time at classes proliferating throughout the suburbs. Doctors added to the form's acceptability by giving medical advice on how to survive it unbruised. In addition, the New York Times began using breaking as a metaphor even in articles that had nothing to do with hip-hop (Banes, 2004 , p. 13).

Hip-hop goes hand-in-hand with the transformations of styles, youth culture and urban space. These changes have given new life to the content of rap songs and have encouraged the street art exposition in galleries and the creation of a Decalogue of acrobatic steps to be hanged in dance schools. This has partially emptied hip-hop of its social context and has consequently driven it away from its significance. Nevertheless, with several disciplines—and rap in particular, as we will analyze afterward—young people of the end and the beginning of the century still explore creativity and identity through a new relationship with the territory and the cultural industry.

The transformation of youth cultures and of street style. The two souls of hip-hop

It has been frequently outlined through the study of its origins, of the three main areas of hip-hop culture and of the link with the ethnic group and the reference territory, that the place of expression for the young generations has always been the metropolis. Articulated in micro-forms and relegated to the borders of the urban space, these expressions of identity concern social and territorial groups often represented by the mainstream media as problem generators. It is a conflict which refers to forms of typical antagonism (cultural endurance) characterized by new elements and that, in a short time, has acquired transnational contours through the media.

Furthermore, this internationalization of the conflict will be fostered by the rapid development of the Net and the deterritorialization of cultures, factors which will influence the socio-economic structure beyond the lifestyle of the street groups of the Nineties.

With the development of sophisticated systems of information, in Western countries at least, the factory and the productive process—as a scene of struggle and social aggregator—have given way to communication and new lifestyle. Forms of traditional living have melt, impoverishing stable relationships, district economies, and implicit mechanisms of social safety nets. The impact of these transformations on specific social groups (privatization of needs, functionalization of some urban areas to the reproduction of low-paid workers, gentrification of districts, such as Gracia district in Barcelona or the ghettos of Los Angeles) compels us to focus on the restrictions imposed on street-based entertainment activities. This has encouraged the emergence of a new institutional framework, which has represented the end of Foucault's disciplinary society (with the comeback of a pre-bourgeois system of prevention, with still clearer physical boundaries), determining the advent of forms of social control not aimed at the creation of bodies functional to the productive cycle, but to the constrictive limitation of the surplus of human groups (De Giorgi, 2002 ), part of a power dynamic which does not guarantee anymore a social citizenship (De Giorgi, 2002 ).

Thinking the coexistence of safety policies in metropolis, clearly visible in the technical rationalization of the physical space, with socialization processes explicated by consumption, is considered a precondition to the production of a feasible plan of analysis for the study of youth cultures. It is starting from the acceptance of this new definition of relations and interactions within the social system, that we want to stress the individualistic impulse of new generations, and the commercial co-optation of street style, as a consequence of the “increasing collusion with the brand system” (Barile, 2019 , p. IX). “Both of all are dynamics which cross the rap arena (and mostly trap) characterizing representations, lyrics, and professional choices of its main actors in a more or less explicit way” (Cuzzocrea and Benasso, 2020 , p. 343):

the aesthetic intentions and the demands created in the contexts of contemporary youth arenas are definitely more focused on politics of existence than of resistance, thus aiming at the social recognition of a self-sufficient personal identity, which defines itself as singular, authentic, creative, and free (Ferreira, 2016, p. 68, cited by Cuzzocrea and Benasso, 2020 , p. 243).

Nevertheless nowadays, analyzing collective behaviors from a cognitive perspective, discussing class and territorial affiliations (the street, the pub, the square, and the corner shop), could result in a timelessness in the time of sharing , of fake , of the absolutization of cyberspace and of the performative subject (from work to consumption).

In the last decades, a set of completely new living conditions have firmly established their position. They have benefited a process of osmosis among “image-consuming” cultures, no more identifiable in a changeless collective subject, but inspired to a hybrid collectivity (Pohlemus, 1994 ) based on an aesthetic peculiarity. At present, the countless articulations of youth cultures do not allow the understanding of what is meant by radicalization of indicators in performative subcultures, in proletarian suburbs, in the critical and reflective elaboration of aestheticization, analyzed as means of conflict together with a class and generational factor.

In this context, it is possible to observe an objective condition of accelerated cut-up on the part of the new generations, inscribed in a contingency where social and political borders are no more valid. The dividing line among opposed cultural genres begins to crumble with gothic cultures, where the antithetical visual dualism between working class subculture—referring to Skinhead, Mod, and Ted styles—and middle-class counter culture (Hippies, Provos, etc.) splinters and all those forms of re-enchantment based on new forms of religiosity, often new age, dematerialize.

From the Eighties and Nineties, the classic concepts of subculture and street style enter into crisis because of “two simultaneous processes: on the one hand, the increasing value of communication, which rapidly circulates the signs of various ‘stylistic isles’, fostering hybridization and crossover phenomena in two different ways of style surfing and of sampling'n'mixing ” (Barile, 2019 , p. IX); on the other hand, the commercialization of a young lifestyle is always more sensationalized by marketing requirements. All these aspects have in some way also influenced hip-hop.

From the block of flats in Sedwick avenue—in the Bronx of 1973—, during an event organized to encourage socialization among teenagers living in the neighborhood and collect money to buy school uniforms (Nexus, 2020 , p. 20 sgg.), a popular history started and still today, after more than 40 years, holds together in a global but binary dimension, thousands of territorial realities. In fact, whereas at the beginning of the Seventies, the militant soul of hip-hop was prevailing and then, during the Eighties, a certain balance between the strong political connotation and the playful soul was reached, and finally, during the Nineties, 3 the commercial aspect became the predominant one (Barile, 2019 , p. IX).

Anyway, even if the commercial soul “will become a distinctive sign of this style” (Barile, 2019 , p. IX), “hip-hop, declined in rap, in some areas of the outskirts is simultaneously place of agency and personal success and a means for negotiation of spaces and collective identities” (Giubilaro and Pecorelli, 2019 , p. 24), and also daily practice of activism. In this respect, Giubilaro and Pecorelli write that

The diffusion of rap and its commercialization have made the genre so articulated and heterogeneous to make it difficult to state anything except for analysis based on the singularity of its practices and manifestations […]. Furthermore, as well as any other cultural expression, rap is the product of complex hybridizations among hegemonic and counter hegemonic practices, which sometimes can coexist inside a same performance, lyric, or rhyme (Giubilaro and Pecorelli, 2019 , p. 25).

If on the one hand, the commercialization of rap music “has permitted the diffusion of the hip-hop culture at an international level” (Neal interviewed by u.net, 2006 , p. 37), on the other hand, this cooptation from the cultural industry has transformed it in an accessible product. In this way, it occurs what Clarke has defined as the “defusion” of a life style, concept which can be understood within the usual opposition between reappropriation from the bottom or from the top (thus from the mass media) of a culture:

“defusion” we mean that a particular style is dislocated from the context and group which generated it and taken up with a stress on those elements which make it “a commercial proposition,” especially their novelty. From the standpoint of the subculture which generated it, the style exists as a total lifestyle; via the commercial nexus, it is transformed into a novel consumption style. Typically, the more “acceptable” elements are stressed, and others de-stressed. (Clarke, 2003 , p. 188).

Nevertheless, the hip-hop of the new millennium has also succeeded in both taking the transformations and saving spaces for authenticity (Pedretti and Vivan, 2009 , p. 168). From Europe to Americas, from the French Casey, Kaaris, NTM, who participated and “commented” the riots in Parisian banlieue of Clichy Sous Bois, to the Chilean Ana Tijoux and the Doblecero, hip-hop presents a “transnational” (Meghelli, 2012 ; Gardner, 2014 ) version, with the purpose of reinforcing social nets among people living at the edges of the great productions, or precariously. Hip-hop resumes, one more time, the concept of territory (metropolitan quarters), of ethnicity, of youth, and of the self who realizes himself in a collective subject assuming the will of a critical and self-reflecting position about his own condition.

From these examples, it can be noticed that the existence of spaces for autonomy—understandable within what we can define the proliferation of styles and distinctive signs, typical of contemporary youth cultures (Pohlemus, 1994 ; Muggleton, 2000 )—still gives the possibility to the hip-hop culture to speak about social injustices, poor districts, and power more than a mere bling bling . This happens inside the entertainment industry, exploring those channels (especially digital) whose aim is to promote an artificial image of the hip-hop movement.

The hip-hop “‘beats his time’—writes Riccardo Pedretti—proposing a critical analysis of contemporary society which follows a harsh path and full of pitfalls using its same means in a subversive manner” (Pedretti and Vivan, 2009 , p. 169).

The socio-historical contexts, and the rituals of the hip-hop culture which we have discussed in these pages, have permitted a comparison among the socio-anthropological complexity of young hip-hoppers' cultural productions, referring to Cohen's three levels of analysis. Showing a continuity with the concepts of the English sociologist, the key points of the analysis have been represented by a generational culture, born and grew up in ethnic ghettos (corresponding to the historical level), by the different areas of hip-hop (the semiotic level) and the lifestyles (sense of territory, affiliation, solidarity, creativity, etc.), referring to the phenomenological level. In this conceptual frame, a reflection has been developed about subjective and collective affirmation processes, created since the Seventies and the following decades, starting from the outskirts of U.S. metropolis. Subsequently, these aspects have enabled us to reason about the means through which we can understand the transformations of street style, after fundamental changes in the metropolis and the youth culture.

Starting from a territorial perspective, it has been possible to understand an action collocated in a wider space and provided by communicational codes which, crossing contemporary world, have overwhelmed several youth groupings. Their reaction to the continuous socio-economical conflicts in the metropolis has been lived in other places than those imposed by the dominant codes (school and work), and in more symbolic subsystems, “infrastructural” and “plastic” (objects, clothes, music, and places attended).

These processes of affirmation, which have often had the less social protection among their protagonists—at the beginning of the hip-hop culture over all—have revealed themselves in spatial practices of re-appropriation of the neighborhoods in a “street grammar” as arrogant as diversified.

With reference to the U.S. context, the young subject has started to impose himself since the de-fragmentation of the (social and cultural) self-perception, in those areas overwhelmed by a runaway urban renewal (which was also in all respects an anthropological and cultural change). In the years of a large-scale gentrification since the Sixties, an irreplaceable crack began to reproduce in the secular balance of traditional economic and family structures. From their contradictions, a new youth symbolic and cultural universe took shape.

The hip-hop subculture has thus become an opportunity for redemption and for the conquest of a status, modifying the processes through which identity is shaped and changing the modes of (extra-familiar) socialization of the new generations, focused on the construction of their personal histories by subverting social routines.

In a retrospective evaluation, hip-hop has been determined by the convergence of several factors. Social contingencies, cultural trends, and endogenous variables are peculiar elements to understand the features, the complexity, and the increasing reaction to the hegemonic culture.

Finally, changes in the hip-hop culture of the last decades have been mentioned, and the unbalance toward the commercial soul more than toward the political one has been observed, even if it has not consisted in a loss of its original force. This is given to the fact that “the underground version continues to carry ideas, besides it enables a social protest and represents an educational instrument […], so it can significantly enter the opinion-making processes, particularly among young people […]” (Privitera, 2016 , p. 72).

In addition, these changes have to be contextualized inside a larger break, which affects youth culture and the generations born and grew up in the society of consumerism and globalization. In this case, street style cannot be related to a relationship of power, to social classes, and it is not the epiphenomenon of economic structures which forge experiences of marginality and realize some reactive choices (Corchia, 2017 , p. 308). In fact, as Luca Corchia illustrates in his analysis of youth contemporary identities, “cultural affiliations [are] multiform and changing, some partially or totally opposed to the mainstream , others, partially or totally adherents to the hegemonic culture”. Paraphrasing Bennett, Corchia continues commenting on “relational nets characterized by fluid temporal borders and ‘floating’ forms of belongings”, in which “the existence develops through a fragmented series of real and virtual spaces, in which identities and roles dependent on the interactions of here and now are explored, before collocating in new contexts and acquiring still different roles and identities” (ivi, p. 311).

Data availability statement

Author contributions.

The author confirms being the sole contributor of this work and has approved it for publication.

Conflict of interest

The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The reviewer VF declared shared research group Ais- Associazione Italiana di Sociologia- section: Sociology of Sport with the author LB to the handling editor.

Publisher's note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

1 The hip-hop architecture is also composed by other practices, such as Djing, which I shall not explore in this paper, because it is considered part of the sound system (soundtrack consisting in the plates to the disks and the microphone). In fact, the rapper must mark his elocutions (timing) in time with the dubbing line, produced by the Disc Jockey (Lapassade and Roussellot, 2009 , p. 154–155).

2 Before proceeding with the analysis, it is important to clarify that the prevailing models of reference of the hip-hop culture mostly reproduce the features of hegemonic masculinity, just as theorized by Connell ( 1995 ), even if over time a new space for not hegemonic masculinities is developing (see for example Frank Ocean). Territorial and/or ethnic relations are homosocial and, as occurring in classical subcultures (Hall and Jefferson, 2003 ), the presence of women, at least in the hip-hop of the beginning, is marginal and subordinate. Nevertheless, female artists or women-only groups have emerged over the years, from music to break-dance. Their role has become increasingly central and they have raised questions connected to gender relations in the hip-hop culture. Anyway, given the vastness of the subject, I shall not include the analysis of gender models in this paper. Given the obvious impossibility to provide a complete bibliography, I shall therefore just mention: Morgan ( 1995 ) and Schloss ( 2009 ).

3 According to Grag Tate, the TV channel MTV plays a key role in this sense: “it has been the functional means for the diffusion of these videos at a global level. Many teenagers got to know rap through this channel. While the hard-edged and lean sound of the hip hop productions captivated increasing market shares, the capitalistic system began to take action to co-opt this culture, diluting it to make it more appealing to a white public. Productions started to be imposed from the top instead than from the bottom, by the artists' creativity […]. From an aesthetic point of view it has had an impact similar to the revolution brought by jazz and bebop, whilst from a commercial point of view it obtained the same popularity than soul and funk (Tate interviewed by u.net, 2006 , p. 137).

  • Banes S. (2004). Breaking, in That's the Joint! The Hip-Hop Studies Reader , eds Forman M., Neal M. A. (London; New York, NY: Routledge; ), 13–20. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Barile N. (2019). Introduzione in Demoni popolari e panico morale , ed Cohen S. (Milano-Udine: Mimesis; ), I–XIV. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Castleman C. (1982). Getting Up: Subway Graffiti in NewYork . Cambridge: Mit Press. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Castleman C. (2004). The politics of graffiti, in That's the Joint! The Hip-Hop Studies Reader , eds Forman M., Neal M. A. (London; New York, NY: Routledge; ), 21–29. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Clarke J. (2003). Style, in Resistance Through Rituals , eds Hall S., Jefferson T. (London; New York, NY. Routledge; ), 175–191. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Clarke J., Hall S., Jefferson T., Roberts B. (2003). Subcultures, cultures and class: a theoretical overview, in Resistance Through Rituals , eds Hall S., Jefferson T. (London; New York, NY: Routledge; ), 9–74. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Cohen P. (1997). Subculture culture conflict and working-class community, in Rethinking the Youth Question , ed Cohen P. (London: Palgrave; ), 48–63. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Connell R. W. (1995). Masculinities . Cambridge: Polity. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Corchia L. (2017). I Post-Subcultural Studies e le identità giovanili. Retrospettiva di un dibattito . Studi Cult. 14 , 293–320. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Cristante S. (1983). Giovani al triplo Gin, in La rivolta dello stile. Milano , eds Cristante S., Di Cerbo A., Spinucci G. (Milano: Franco Angeli; ), 27–39. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Cuzzocrea V., Benasso S. (2020). Fatti strada e fatti furbo: generazione Z, musica trap e influencer . Studi Cult. 3 , 335–356. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Dal Lago A., Giordano S. (2018). Sporcare i muri . Bologna: Il Mulino. [ Google Scholar ]
  • De Giorgi A. (2002). Il governo dell'eccedenza . Verona: Ombre Corte. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Gardner L. M. (2014). “We either move or petrify”: transnational hip hop feminisms amongst hip hop dancers and graffiteras. A critical literature review . GEMS 7 , 12–21. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Gatti C. (1983). Dalle gangs di strada alla cultura Hip-Hop, in La rivolta dello stile , eds Cristante S., Di Cerbo A., Spinucci G. (Milano: Franco Angeli; ), 135–142. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Giubilaro C., Pecorelli V. (2019). El nost Milan: il rap dei ‘nuovi italiani’, tra riappropriazioni urbane e rivendicazioni identitarie . Riv. Geogr. Ital. CXXVI 4 , 21–42. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hall S., Jefferson T. (eds.). (2003). Resistance Through Rituals . London: Routledge. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hebdige D. (2004). Rap and hip-hop: the New York connection, in That's the Joint! The Hip-Hop Studies Reader , eds Forman M., Neal M. A. (London; New York, NY: Routledge; ), 223–232. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Holman M. (2004). Breaking: the history, in That's the Joint! The Hip-Hop Studies Reader , eds Forman M., Neal M. A. (London; New York, NY: Routledge; ), 31–39. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Lafortune J. (1993). Le muralisme à l'université . Paris: Université de Paris, 8. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Lapassade G., Roussellot P. (2009). Rap il furore del dire . Lecce: Bepress. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Mansbach A. (2013). New York City's War on Graffiti . Huffpost. Availableonline at: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/nyc-graffiti_b_2527074 (accessed February 12, 2022).
  • Meghelli S. (2012). Between New York and Paris: Hip Hop and the Transnational Politics of Race, Culture, and Citizenship (New York, NY: Doctoral dissertation; ). Columbia University. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Morgan J. (1995). Fly-girls, bitches, and hoes: notes of a hip-hop feminist . Soc. Text 45 , 151–157. 10.2307/466678 [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Muggleton D. (2000). Inside Subculture . Oxford: Berg. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Naldi F. (2020). Tracce di Blu . Milano: Postmedia. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Nexus (2020). Stradario Hip-Hop . Roma: Alegre. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Pedretti R., Vivan I. (2009). Dalla lambretta allo skateboard . Milano: Unicopli. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Petrelli S. (1992). Colloquio epistolare, in Inchiesta sull'Hip-Hop , eds Fumarola P., Lapassade G. (Lecce: Capone; ), 85–111. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Pitti I. (2018). Giovani ultras e marginalità sociale. La partecipazione come strategia di resistenza quotidiana . Stud. Sociol. 1–16. 10.26350/000309_000013 [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ]
  • Pohlemus T. (1994). Street Style . London: Thames and Hudson. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Privitera W. (2016). Il Rap ei diritti dei migranti . Geotema 50 , 72–77. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Schloss J. G. (2009). Foundation: B-Boys, B-Girls and Hip-Hop Culture in New York . Oxfrod: Oxford University Press. [ Google Scholar ]
  • u.net (2006). Bigger Than Hip Hop . Milano: Agenzia X. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Willis P. E. (2003). The cultural meaning of drug use, in Resistance Through Rituals , eds Hall S., Jefferson T. (London; New York, NY: Routledge; ), 106–118. [ Google Scholar ]

Advertisement

Advertisement

Conflicting Paradigms on Gender and Sexuality in Rap Music: A Systematic Review

  • Published: 21 November 2014
  • Volume 19 , pages 577–589, ( 2015 )

Cite this article

research paper on rap music

  • Denise Herd 1  

9878 Accesses

5 Altmetric

Explore all metrics

Rap music has major social and cultural significance for American and global youth audiences and, along with other media, is believed to play a central role in shaping adolescents’ beliefs, attitudes and intentions related to sexuality. However few studies concerned with health issues have explored the content of lyrics regarding sex and gender, with most research in this area focused on the effects of media portrayals on sexual behavior and problems. Much of the scholarship analyzing sexuality and gender issues in the media comes from disciplines outside of health and the behavioral sciences, such as cultural studies. This paper compares literature related to sexuality and gender in rap music from a variety of perspectives such as feminism, cultural studies, and sociology as well as from health and behavioral research in order to deepen understanding of the lyrical content that may influence sexual attitudes and behavior. The review illustrates that conflicting paradigms, for example of sexual agency or misogyny, emerge in this literature and that few studies are both conceptually rich and empirically strong. Future research should address this challenge as well as explore changes over time in how sexual and gender relationships have been depicted in this musical genre.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Subscribe and save.

  • Get 10 units per month
  • Download Article/Chapter or Ebook
  • 1 Unit = 1 Article or 1 Chapter
  • Cancel anytime

Price includes VAT (Russian Federation)

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Rent this article via DeepDyve

Institutional subscriptions

Similar content being viewed by others

research paper on rap music

Zimdancehall Music as Rules of Sexual Engagement

research paper on rap music

There’s Some Whores in this House: An Examination of Female Sexuality in R&B/Hip Hop and Pop Music, 1991–2021

research paper on rap music

“Let’s Talk About Sex”: How Sexual Health Dimensions are Integrated into Verbal Discourses in Teen Dramas Available on Video on Demand

Adams, T. M., & Fuller, D. B. (2006). The words have changed but the ideology remains the same: Misogynistic lyrics in rap music. Journal of Black Studies, 36 (6), 938–957. doi: 10.1177/0021934704274072 .

Article   Google Scholar  

Armstrong, E. G. (2001). Gangsta misogyny: A content analysis of the portrayals of violence against women in rap music, 1987–1993. Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture, 8 (2), 96–126.

Google Scholar  

Arnett, J. J. (1995). Adolescents’ uses of media for self-socialization. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 24 (5), 519–533. doi: 10.1007/BF01537054 .

Aubrey, J. S., & Frisby, C. M. (2011). Sexual objectification in music videos: A content analysis comparing gender and genre. Mass Communication and Society, 14 (4), 475–501. doi: 10.1080/15205436.2010.513468 .

Aubrey, J. S., Hopper, K. M., & Mbure, W. G. (2011). Check that body! The effects of sexually objectifying music videos on college men’s sexual beliefs. Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 55 (3), 360–379. doi: 10.1080/08838151.2011.597469 .

Balaji, M. (2009). Owning black masculinity: The intersection of cultural commodification and self-construction in rap music videos. Communication, Culture & Critique, 2 (1), 21–38. doi: 10.1111/j.1753-9137.2008.01027.x .

Blair, M. E. (1993). Commercialization of the rap music youth subculture. The Journal of Popular Culture, 27 (3), 21–33. doi: 10.1111/j.0022-3840.1993.00021.x .

Brown, J. D. (2002). Mass media influences on sexuality. Journal of Sex Research, 39 (1), 42–45. doi: 10.1080/00224490209552118 .

Brown, J. D., Halpern, C. T., & L’Engle, K. L. (2005). Mass media as a sexual super peer for early maturing girls. Journal of Adolescent Health, 36 (5), 420–427. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2004.06.003 .

Brown, J. D., L’Engle, K. L., Pardun, C. J., Guo, G., Kenneavy, K., & Jackson, C. (2006). Sexy media matter: Exposure to sexual content in music, movies, television, and magazines predicts black and white adolescents’ sexual behavior. Pediatrics, 117 (4), 1018–1027. doi: 10.1542/peds.2005-1406 .

Collins, P. H. (2005). Black sexual politics . London: Routledge.

Emerson, R. A. (2002). “Where my girls at?”: Negotiating black womanhood in music videos. Gender and Society, 16 (1), 115–135. doi: 10.2307/3081879 .

Englis, B. G., Solomon, M. R., & Olofsson, A. (1993). Consumption imagery in music television: A bi-cultural perspective. Journal of Advertising, 22 (4), 21–33. doi: 10.2307/4188897 .

Goodall, N. H. (1994). Depend on myself: T.L.C. and the evolution of black female rap. The Journal of Negro History, 79 (1), 85–93. doi: 10.2307/2717669 .

Herd, D. (1985). Migration, cultural transformation and the rise of black liver cirrhosis mortality. Addiction, 80 (4), 397–410. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.1985.tb03011.x .

Herd, D. (2005). Changes in the prevalence of alcohol use in rap song lyrics, 1979–97. Addiction (Abingdon, England), 100 (9), 1258–1269. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2005.01192.x .

Herd, D. (2008). Changes in drug use prevalence in rap music songs, 1979–1997. Addiction Research & Theory, 16 (2), 167–180. doi: 10.1080/16066350801993987 .

Herd, D. (2009). Changing images of violence in rap music lyrics: 1979–1997. Journal of Public Health Policy, 30 (4), 395–406. doi: 10.1057/jphp.2009.36 .

Higginbotham, E. B. (1993). Righteous discontent: The women’s movement in the black Baptist Church, 1880–1920 . Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Hill Collins, P. (2000). Black feminist thought: Knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment (Rev. 10th anniversary ed.). New York: Routledge.

Hill Collins, P. (2004). Black sexual politics: African Americans, gender, and the New Racism . New York: Routledge.

Book   Google Scholar  

Hooks, B. (2006). Outlaw culture: Resisting representations (1st ed.). New York: Routledge.

Kelley, R. D. G. (1996). Race rebels: Culture, politics, and the Black working class (1st Free Press paperback ed.). New York: Free Press. Distributed by Simon & Schuster.

Kistler, M. E., & Lee, M. J. (2009). Does exposure to sexual hip hop music videos influence the sexual attitudes of college students? Mass Communication and Society, 13 (1), 67–86. doi: 10.1080/15205430902865336 .

Kitwana, B. (2002). The Hip-Hop Generation: Young Blacks and the crisis in African-American culture . New York: Basic Civitas Books.

Kitwana, B. (2004). The state of the hip hop generation: How hip hop’s cultural movement is evolving into political power. Diogenes, 51 (3), 115–120. doi: 10.1177/0392192104043662 .

L’Engle, K. L., Jackson, C., & Brown, J. D. (2006). Early adolescents’ cognitive susceptibility to initiating sexual intercourse. Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 38 (2), 97–105. doi: 10.1363/psrh.38.097.06 .

Lena, J. C. (2006). Social context and musical content of rap music, 1979–1995. Social Forces, 85 (1), 479–495. doi: 10.2307/3844424 .

Lou, C., Cheng, Y., Gao, E., Zuo, X., Emerson, M. R., & Zabin, L. S. (2012). Media’s contribution to sexual knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors for adolescents and young adults in three Asian cities. The Journal of Adolescent Health: Official Publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine, 50 (3 Suppl), S26–S36. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2011.12.009 .

Martino, S. C., Collins, R. L., Elliott, M. N., Strachman, A., Kanouse, D. E., & Berry, S. H. (2006). Exposure to degrading versus nondegrading music lyrics and sexual behavior among youth. Pediatrics, 118 (2), e430–e441. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-0131 .

Miller-young, M. (2007). Hip hop honeys and da hustlaz: Black sexualities in the new hip hop pornography. Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism, 8 (1), 261–292.

Mizell, L. (2003). Music Preferences in the U.S.: 1982–2002. Prepared for the National Endowment for the Arts . Lee Mizell Consulting: Santa Monica, CA.

Neal, M. A. (2006). New Black man . New York: Routledge.

Ogbar, J. O. G. (2007). Hip-Hop Revolution: The Culture and Politics of Rap . Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.

Orbe, M. P. (1998). Constructions of reality on MTV’s “the real world”: An analysis of the restrictive coding of black masculinity. Southern Communication Journal, 64 (1), 32–47. doi: 10.1080/10417949809373116 .

Oware, M. (2007). A “Man’s Woman”?: Contradictory messages in the songs of female rappers, 1992–2000. Journal of Black Studies, 39 (5), 786–802.

Pardun, C. J., L’Engle, K. L., & Brown, J. D. (2005). Linking exposure to outcomes: Early adolescents’ consumption of sexual content in six media. Mass Communication and Society, 8 (2), 75–91. doi: 10.1207/s15327825mcs0802_1 .

Perry, I. (2004). Prophets of the Hood: Politics and Poetics in Hip Hop . Durham: Duke University Press Books.

Peterson, S. H., Wingood, G. M., DiClemente, R. J., Harrington, K., & Davies, S. (2007). Images of sexual stereotypes in rap videos and the health of African American female adolescents. Journal of Women’s Health, 16 (8), 1157–1164. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2007.0429 .

Phillips, L., Reddick-Morgan, K., & Stephens, D. P. (2005). Oppositional consciousness within an oppositional realm: The case of feminism and womanism in rap and hip hop, 1976–2004. The Journal of African American History, 90 (3), 253–277. doi: 10.2307/20064000 .

Pough, G. D. (2007). What it do, Shorty? Black Women, Gender & Families, 1 (2), 78–99.

Primack, B. A., Gold, M. A., Schwarz, E. B., & Dalton, M. A. (2008). Degrading and non-degrading sex in popular music: A content analysis. Public Health Reports, 123 (5), 593.

Roberts, R. (1991). Music videos, performance and resistance: Feminist rappers. The Journal of Popular Culture, 25 (2), 141–152. doi: 10.1111/j.0022-3840.1991.2502_141.x .

Rose, T. (1990). Never trust a big butt and a smile. Camera Obscura, 8 (2 23), 108–131.

Rose, T. (1994). Black noise: Rap music and black culture in contemporary America . Hanover: University Press of New England.

Rose, T. (2008). The hip hop wars: What we talk about when we talk about hip hop — and why it matters (11.2.2008 edition.). New York: Basic Civitas Books.

Shelton, M. L. (1997). Can’t touch this! Representations of the African American female body in urban rap videos. Popular Music and Society, 21 (3), 107–116. doi: 10.1080/03007769708591681 .

Skeggs, B. (1993). Two minute brother: Contestation through gender, “race” and sexuality. Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research, 6 (3), 299–322. doi: 10.1080/13511610.1993.9968358 .

Stephens, D., & Phillips, L. (2003). Freaks, gold diggers, divas, and dykes: The sociohistorical development of adolescent African American women’s sexual scripts. Sexuality and Culture, 7 (1), 3–49. doi: 10.1007/BF03159848 .

Ter Bogt, T. F. M., Engels, R. C. M. E., Bogers, S., & Kloosterman, M. (2010). “Shake It Baby, Shake It”: Media preferences, sexual attitudes and gender stereotypes among adolescents. Sex Roles, 63 (11–12), 844–859. doi: 10.1007/s11199-010-9815-1 .

Troka, D. (2002). You heard my gun cock: Female agency and aggression in contemporary rap music. African American Research Perspectives, 8 (2), 82–102.

Turner, J. (2011). Sex and the spectacle of music videos: An examination of the portrayal of race and sexuality in music videos. Sex Roles, 64 (3), 173–191. doi: 10.1007/s11199-010-9766-6 .

Weitzer, R., & Kubrin, C. E. (2009). Misogyny in rap music a content analysis of prevalence and meanings. Men and Masculinities, 12 (1), 3–29. doi: 10.1177/1097184X08327696 .

West, C. (2001). Race Matters . Boston: Beacon Press.

Wingood, G. M., DiClemente, R. J., Bernhardt, J. M., Harrington, K., Davies, S. L., Robillard, A., & Hook, E. W. (2003). A prospective study of exposure to rap music videos and African American female adolescents’ health. American Journal of Public Health, 93 (3), 437–439.

Download references

Acknowledgments

Funding for this research was provided by a University of California Faculty Research Grant.

Conflict of interest

The author declares that the author has no conflict of interest.

Author information

Authors and affiliations.

School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94707, USA

Denise Herd

You can also search for this author in PubMed   Google Scholar

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Denise Herd .

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Herd, D. Conflicting Paradigms on Gender and Sexuality in Rap Music: A Systematic Review. Sexuality & Culture 19 , 577–589 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12119-014-9259-9

Download citation

Published : 21 November 2014

Issue Date : September 2015

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/s12119-014-9259-9

Share this article

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:

Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.

Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative

  • Gender relationships
  • Masculinity
  • Find a journal
  • Publish with us
  • Track your research

Articles on Rap music

Displaying 1 - 20 of 92 articles.

research paper on rap music

Rap lyrics can provide catharsis – both for artists and their fans

Paul Stephen Adey , Nottingham Trent University

research paper on rap music

The Spark: summer’s biggest banger comes from a decades-old initiative helping refugee and working-class kids in Cork

J. Griffith Rollefson , University College Cork

research paper on rap music

Prodigy’s personal mythology: Remembering the ‘fallen angel’ of Mobb Deep

Marcus Evans , McMaster University

research paper on rap music

Eminem’s new single, Houdini, is a self-referential reminder of his unstoppable anti-hero  appeal

Glenn Fosbraey , University of Winchester

research paper on rap music

Why do American rappers see Drake as not Black enough?

Alexandra Boutros , Wilfrid Laurier University

research paper on rap music

Drake-Kendrick Lamar feud: What does the law say about defamatory lyrics?

Lisa Macklem , Western University

research paper on rap music

Rap ‘beef’ as public spectacle is a dangerous game that artists rarely win

A.D. Carson , University of Virginia

research paper on rap music

Illmatic at 30: how Nas invented epistolary rap – and changed the hyper-masculine world of hip hop forever

research paper on rap music

Four rising Welsh music acts to set your playlist ablaze

Paul Carr , University of South Wales and Robert Smith , University of South Wales

research paper on rap music

A brief history of the diss track – from the Roxanne Wars to Megan Thee Stallion

Adam de Paor-Evans , University of Plymouth

research paper on rap music

Russian rap has long held up a mirror to Russian society – and the current reflection isn’t flattering

John Vandevert , Uppsala University

research paper on rap music

‘Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)’ turns 30: How the album pays homage to hip-hop ’s mythical and martial arts origins

research paper on rap music

Sho Madjozi: the pop star using traditional culture to shape a fresh identity for young South Africans

Owen Seda , Tshwane University of Technology and Motshidisi Manyeneng , Tshwane University of Technology

research paper on rap music

50 years of hip-hop : Its social and political power resonates far beyond its New York birthplace

Anna Lippman , York University, Canada

research paper on rap music

Hip-hop on trial: When can a rapper’s lyrics be used as evidence in a criminal case?

Taifha Natalee Alexander , University of California, Los Angeles

research paper on rap music

Microphone check − 5 ways that music education is changing

Clint Randles , University of South Florida

research paper on rap music

Dizzee Rascal’s Boy In Da Corner turns 20 – here’s how it ushered in the era of grime

Julia Toppin , University of Westminster

research paper on rap music

How some Muslim and non-Muslim rappers alike embrace Islam’s greeting of peace

Margarita Guillory , Boston University and Jeta Luboteni , Boston University

research paper on rap music

Hip-hop at 50: how the sights, sounds and moves of the music spread across the world

research paper on rap music

Hip-hop at 50: 7 essential listens to celebrate rap’s widespread influence

Nick Lehr , The Conversation ; Jamaal Abdul-Alim , The Conversation ; Matt Williams , The Conversation ; Molly Jackson , The Conversation , and Howard Manly , The Conversation

Related Topics

  • African Americans
  • Gangsta rap
  • Give me perspective
  • hip hop @ 50
  • Hip hop lyrics
  • Tupac Shakur

Top contributors

research paper on rap music

Associate Professor of Hip-Hop, University of Virginia

research paper on rap music

Research Lead at Rhythm Obscura / Lecturer in the School of Art, Design and Architecture, University of Plymouth

research paper on rap music

Assistant Professor of Practice, Mills College

research paper on rap music

Associate Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Winchester

research paper on rap music

Rap Lyricist and Lecturer in Music Performance at Confetti Institute of Creative Technology, Nottingham Trent University

research paper on rap music

Professor of Music, University College Cork

research paper on rap music

Professor of Music, Wesleyan University

research paper on rap music

Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Florida

research paper on rap music

Associate Professor of Africana Philosophies of Religions and American Religious Diversity, San Diego State University

research paper on rap music

Piano Performance Fellow, The University of Queensland

research paper on rap music

Associate Professor of American Culture, University of Michigan

research paper on rap music

Teaching Assistant Professor of Musicology, West Virginia University

research paper on rap music

PhD. Department of Religious Studies, McMaster University

research paper on rap music

Professor of Social Work, Texas State University

research paper on rap music

Professor of History and Founding Director, Center for the Study of Popular Music, University of Connecticut

  • X (Twitter)
  • Unfollow topic Follow topic

research paper on rap music

Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

  •  We're Hiring!
  •  Help Center
  • Most Cited Papers
  • Most Downloaded Papers
  • Newest Papers
  • Last »
  • Misogyny Follow Following
  • Law And Popular Culture Follow Following
  • Neighborhood Effects Follow Following
  • Recidivism Follow Following
  • Hip-Hop/Rap Follow Following
  • Hip hop Follow Following
  • Hip-Hop Studies Follow Following
  • Hip Hop Culture Follow Following
  • Black feminism Follow Following
  • Hip-hop and Rap Follow Following

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • Academia.edu Journals
  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024

Women in Rap Songs: A Difference between Male and Female Voices

  • International Journal of Linguistics and Translation Studies 2(3):76-93
  • CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
  • This person is not on ResearchGate, or hasn't claimed this research yet.

Abstract and Figures

Study Corpora's Summary of Details

Discover the world's research

  • 25+ million members
  • 160+ million publication pages
  • 2.3+ billion citations
  • Aaron Diapana
  • Agung Suhadi
  • Kiagus Baluqiah

Yupika Maryansyah

  • Fadlun Suweleh

Oberiri Destiny Apuke

  • Lingbuin Goodness Jigem
  • Andrew P. Smiler

Jennifer W Shewmaker

  • Brittany Hearon

Jeanette Dials

  • Recruit researchers
  • Join for free
  • Login Email Tip: Most researchers use their institutional email address as their ResearchGate login Password Forgot password? Keep me logged in Log in or Continue with Google Welcome back! Please log in. Email · Hint Tip: Most researchers use their institutional email address as their ResearchGate login Password Forgot password? Keep me logged in Log in or Continue with Google No account? Sign up

Home — Essay Samples — Entertainment — Music — Rap Music

one px

Essays on Rap Music

Choosing rap music essay topics.

Rap music is a diverse and influential genre that has had a significant impact on popular culture, social issues, and the music industry. When it comes to writing an essay on rap music, there are countless topics to explore that can provide insight into the history, culture, and impact of this genre. In this guide, we will discuss the importance of choosing the right topic, provide advice on selecting a topic, and offer a comprehensive list of recommended essay topics divided into categories.

The Importance of the Topic

Choosing the right topic for your rap music essay is crucial for a few reasons. First and foremost, it will determine the scope and direction of your research and writing. A well-chosen topic will allow you to delve into an area of rap music that interests you and provides ample material for analysis and discussion. Additionally, a compelling topic will engage your readers and allow you to explore the complexities and nuances of rap music.

Advice on Choosing a Topic

When selecting a rap music essay topic, consider your own interests, as well as the potential impact and relevance of the topic. Think about the aspects of rap music that fascinate you, whether it's the history, cultural significance, social commentary, or musical styles. Additionally, consider the current conversations and debates surrounding rap music and choose a topic that offers new insights or challenges conventional wisdom. Finally, ensure that your chosen topic is specific enough to allow for in-depth analysis but broad enough to provide ample material for research.

Recommended Essay Topics

History and evolution of rap music.

  • The Origins of Rap Music: From Bronx Block Parties to Global Phenomenon
  • The Evolution of Rap Styles: From Old School to Mumble Rap
  • Rap Music and the Civil Rights Movement: A Historical Perspective

Social and Cultural Impact of Rap Music

  • Rap Music and Identity: How Artists Navigate Race, Class, and Gender
  • Rap Music and Politics: The Role of Hip-Hop in Social Activism
  • Rap Music and Globalization: The Spread of Hip-Hop Culture Around the World

Lyricism and Artistic Expression in Rap Music

  • Rap Music and Poetry: Analyzing the Literary Techniques of Hip-Hop Lyrics
  • Rap Music and Storytelling: The Power of Narrative in Hip-Hop Songs
  • Rap Music and Social Commentary: Examining the Themes and Messages in Lyrics

Rap Music and the Music Industry

  • Rap Music and Commercialization: The Impact of Corporate Influence on Hip-Hop
  • Rap Music and Entrepreneurship: How Artists Build Brands and Business Empires
  • Rap Music and Technology: The Role of Digital Platforms in Shaping the Industry

Controversies and Debates in Rap Music

  • Rap Music and Censorship: The Role of Explicit Content and Freedom of Speech
  • Rap Music and Misogyny: Exploring Gender Dynamics in Hip-Hop Culture
  • Rap Music and Violence: Debunking Stereotypes and Examining Realities

These essay topics offer a broad range of options for exploring rap music from different angles. Whether you are interested in the history, social impact, artistic expression, industry dynamics, or controversies surrounding rap music, there are plenty of compelling topics to choose from. By selecting a topic that aligns with your interests and offers an opportunity for in-depth analysis, you can create a captivating and insightful essay on rap music.

The Influence of Rap Music on Society: Glorification of Drugs, Violence, and Misogyny

Misogyny in the lyrics of rap music, made-to-order essay as fast as you need it.

Each essay is customized to cater to your unique preferences

+ experts online

The Immorality and Discrimination in The Lyrics of Rap Music

The history and evolution of rap music, comparative analysis of the musical style of elvis presley and travis scott, struggles in faith and relationship with god in kanye west’s ultralight beam, let us write you an essay from scratch.

  • 450+ experts on 30 subjects ready to help
  • Custom essay delivered in as few as 3 hours

Analysis of The Language Used in Early Commercial Rap Music of The 1980s and 1990s as a Cultural Response to The Socioeconomic Oppression Plaguing The Black Community

Sculpting of individuality and community influence in kendrick lamar’s to pimp a butterfly, xxxtentacion: famous rapper and his controversial career, the role of hip-hop and rap music in promoting human trafficking, get a personalized essay in under 3 hours.

Expert-written essays crafted with your exact needs in mind

History of Hip Hop Music

Gospel music in tupac shakur’s rap, the origin and history of hip hop music, the negative culture of contemporary music, the history of hip hop music, analysis of song "changes" by tupac, a review of hip-hop in seattle, tom hardy’s 1999 rap mixtape, robert bryson hall's biography, the impact of music on emotion: comparing rap and meditative yoga music, controversial attitudes to logic – famous american rapper, messages in the two songs ‘sad’ performed by xxxtentacion and ‘logic’ performed by alessia cara and khalid, entrepreneurial lessons from drake – a famous canadian rapper, kanye west: influence in rap culture and impact, kanye west: influence of many generations, kanye west: influence, innovator and humanitarian, snoop dogg's influence on religion, the importance of kanye west music, relevant topics.

  • Concert Review
  • Video Games
  • Taylor Swift
  • The Hunger Games
  • Film Analysis
  • 12 Angry Men

By clicking “Check Writers’ Offers”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy policy . We’ll occasionally send you promo and account related email

No need to pay just yet!

We use cookies to personalyze your web-site experience. By continuing we’ll assume you board with our cookie policy .

  • Instructions Followed To The Letter
  • Deadlines Met At Every Stage
  • Unique And Plagiarism Free

research paper on rap music

133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples

Looking for exciting hip hop topics to write about? This music genre is still very popular and definitely worth exploring!

  • 🏆 Best Essay Examples & Topic Ideas

🎧 Interesting Rap Topics for Essays & Research Papers

  • 📌 Most Interesting Topics to Write about
  • 👍 Good Essay Topics

❓ Questions About Hip Hop

In your hip-hop essay, you might want to make an overview of the genre or talk about its history. Another option for your rap essay is to compare the old school and the new school of hip-hop. One more idea is to discuss the consequences of the genre’s commercialization.

Want more title ideas? Continue reading! We’ve prepared for you a collection of rap topics and questions for essays and research papers. Hip hop essay examples are added for your inspiration!

🏆 Best Hip Hop Essay Examples & Topic Ideas

  • Hip-Hop Music Other creations of hip-hop are the components of the hip-hop lifestyle. A number of unacceptable behaviors in the society have been encouraged by hip-hop leading to a conflict between the ambassadors of hip-hop and the […]
  • Jazz and Hip Hop: Similarities and Differences Both hip hop and jazz are closely linked and for that matter there are a number of similarities they share prompting some individuals to pronounce that hip hop is ‘the jazz of young individuals in […]
  • Similarities between Ballet and Hip Hop Dance is and always shall be a form of expression where the movements performed speak volumes of the emotions and feelings that the dancer is trying to impart to the audience.
  • Jeffrey O.G. Ogbar, Hip-Hop Revolution: The Culture and Politics of Rap This will be addressed in this book review as we look at how the author represents his views, interpretations and research about the hip-hop culture2 In this book, Ogbar explores the lyrical world of rap […]
  • Hip Hop Dance The TV shows such as the Wild style, Soul Train and Breakin, Beat Street also contributed in showcasing hip hop dance styles during the early periods of hip hop hype.
  • Hip-Hop and the Japanese Culture The prevalence of soul dancing in Japan in the earlier years also formed the basis for the wide acceptance of the hip-hop culture into the Japanese culture because soul dancing was common in the streets […]
  • Hip-Hop and Rap Impact on Social Inequality For instance, Beyonce is one of the most famous artists in the world who have stated her opinion regarding misogyny related to artists and other black women.
  • Planet B-Girl: Community Building and Feminism in Hip-Hop The main idea of the article under analysis is the intentions of female hip-hop artists to prove their choices and demonstrate their abilities by using the same rights male hip-hop artists have already got.
  • Jay-Z’s Contribution to Hip-Hop and Fight for Social Justice One should admit that the crime rate among black people in some poor areas is really quite high, and that is another problem Jay-Z covers in his music.
  • Hip Hop: Common’s Song “Black America Again” His rap is underground and can be said to be street, as many of the poems cover the theme of the streets and what is happening on them.
  • The Impact of Hip-Hop Music Education in Elementary School The theoretical justification of the article is the importance of music, in particular the style of hip-hop, in the formation of the system of interests and career goals of schoolchildren.
  • 50 Cent: Hip-Hop Violence in Modern Media At first, society might negatively react to this example because it is associated with the disorder and the desire to break something to deliver the message.
  • History of Hip-Hop: Identifying the Organizational Learning Issues The samplers of the 1980s were also more technically limited compared to the artist equipment of the 1990s, which produced a richer and more authentic sound.
  • The Hip-Hop Phenomenon of Hyper-Masculinity Sociological Research Question: What lies behind the dominant hyper-masculine paradigm in Hip Hop and Black culture and its various manifestations in lyrics and music videos?
  • Hip-Hop Culture Breaking Down Racial Barriers The hip-hop culture going mainstream was the event reflecting the societal concerns of the ethnic minorities. It presents an example of sports and the arts breaking down racial barriers as their participants efficiently cooperate.
  • Relationship of Hip-Hop With Race and Identity The beefing between the two hip-hop artists, Iggy Azalea and Azealia Banks, indicates a misapprehension existing on hip-hop’s history. Due to the competitive nature of the market, artists try to survive by beefing with their […]
  • Hip-Hop Music and Its History in the 80s-90s Hip-hop music was on the rise in the late 80s, and influential rap collectives such as Run DMC and the Beastie Boys provided an outlet for the hip-hop culture to acquire national recognition.
  • Hip-Hop and Marijuana Use in College Students It has been estimated that over half of the college student population regularly use marijuana, while over 25% used it during past month.
  • Hip Hop Evolution and Racial & Political Conditions A significant influence on the emergence of political and conscious hip hop can be attributed to the Civil-Rights Movements and the Black Power Movements of the 60s and 70s in the United States.
  • Hip-Hop as a Vehicle for Unification in Beat Street This resistance to the vilification and stigmatization of their neighborhoods as spaces of crime, chaos, and evil is one of the factors that strengthen community bonds and communal identity in the neighborhoods in question. The […]
  • Understanding Hip Hop Made by Jay-Z The story of a hustler is a story of the struggle to make a living. I think the “story of a hustler” is like the stories of the Wild West outlaws.
  • Seattle Hip-Hop Scene: Michael “The Wanz” Wansley He was born in 1961 and has been a part of the hip-hop and pop scene of Seattle for the most of his life.
  • The History of Hip-Hop Culture in the United States The discography which is represented in the 3rd disc gives a scope of understanding of the main things which worried rappers at the time.
  • Analysis of Rap and Hip-Hop Culture: Audience of the Songs and the Purposes of the Singers The same is with the analysis of the songs and music, the critics should be aware of the lived realities of the authors and demographic characteristics of the aimed audience.
  • Hip Hop Culture and Music Scratching is a technique which in hip hop culture is used to gauge the expertise of a DJ, as he is expected to produce new sounds simply by moving a record back and forth while […]
  • Gay Culture’s Influence on Hip Hop Fashion Gay men have the influence of female fashion design due to the fact that most of the designers of female clothes are men and most of them are homosexual.
  • Poverty and Hip-Hop: Notorious B.I.G.’s “Juicy” Notorious B.I.G.’s music video for the song “Juicy” was chosen for the analysis because the rapper explored the theme of poverty that deeply affected his life.
  • Jazz and Hip Hop Concerts in Comparison Two pieces in the second performance, In Germany Before the War and Mysterious Barricades, were well performed during the concert. There was a deejay on the deck and background dancers to back up the performance […]
  • Social Inequality: Hip-Hop Culture and Movement When it comes to defining the term ‘social movement’, it is important to understand that the process of a particular group of people striving to have their voice heard in the public sphere, must be […]
  • Social Constructions and Hip Hop Music This process involved the description of the things that I saw at the concert. I described the tone, tempo, and style of music that they sang.
  • Hip-Hop Theory and Culture in the Discography G explains the changes in day-to-day living within the ghettos between the artist’s childhood and the present. Most of the lines from the song praise the person that the song is dedicated to.
  • Literature Study on the Hip-Hop Concept: A Social Movement and Part of the Industry Hip-hop is a genre that does not obey the taboos but creates new stereotypes, allowing itself to use risky language to convey the text of the songs in a much recognizable and provocative manner.
  • Hip Hop Culture in “The Otherside” Documentary Regardless numerous discussions about Hip Hop, this culture remains to be a considerable part of human life that helps to understand that such issue as racial profiling is not only something that is required by […]
  • Hip Hop Duo: Kung Foo Grip Though the history of this duo is neither too complicated nor full of some unpredictable and fatal decisions events, it can be used to explain how the lives of two fans of Hip Hop can […]
  • The Documentary “Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes” Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes is a documentary movie that helps not only to understand the nature of hip hop but to connect a single style of music with the necessity of such crucial issues […]
  • Hip Hop Definition In fact, many authors underline the fact that commercialization of hip-hop has changed its essence considerably and deprived modern people of the possibility to understand the essence of hip-hop and true reasons for its appearance. […]
  • Old School Hip Hop Versus New Hip Hop Music However, although today’s hip hop music does share some similarities with old school hip hop, it is much more superficial and generic, compared to the timeless music of the old school hip hop.
  • Hip-Hop and Politics Correlation in the USA The author outlines the life and the creative process of Clive Campbell or otherwise known as DJ Kook Herc, one of the most influential figures in the early history of the hip-hop genre.
  • Blacks’ Prison Experiences in Hip Hop Culture Though considering the controversy that has been the “elephant in the room” for quite a time, Dyson clearly takes his argument to an admittedly high level of convincingness, it is not only the consideration of […]
  • Hip-Hop Subculture as Answer to Social Inequality One of the most notable aspects of a contemporary living in America is the fact that, as of today, the sub-culture of Hip-Hop had ceased being considered in terms of a largely marginalized socio-cultural phenomenon.
  • “Reflections on Hip Hop” by Eric Dyson In the first place, it is necessary to note that prison is seen as the most important factor affecting development of black males’ identity and three types of experiences are singled out.
  • Hip Hop Music as Media Influence on the Youth Personally, I love listening to rap music, which many people claim that it has led to the spread of violence among young people.
  • Hip-Hop Music and the Role of Women in It: Fight for Women’s Rights in Society While looking at the various roles of women in hip hop and rap, it is also important to note that the way women are presented has various effects on society.
  • Women in Hip-Hop Music: A Provocative and Objectified Gender Roles It is one thing that men want women to be in music videos and play a particular role, but women are willing to participate in the videos.
  • R&B and Hip-Hop Effect Western Music The music that Michael Jackson released was not based on gender but was based on truth and hope to the people and this gave him a lot of influence in the community reason being that […]
  • Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation The book Ca not Stop Wo not Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation brings out the history of the United States from the eyes of a person who would have been considered a loser […]
  • Hip-Hop: News From a Ghetto’s Point of View Youths living in the ghettos have had Hip Hop as one of the most effectual means to voice the social injustice that they experience.
  • “Hip Hop“ Subculture: Music, Vocabulary, and Roots Based on an interview with a member of the subculture, the paper will discuss some of the terms used in the subculture, how its members dress and look, as well as how they act.
  • Fashion Controversies about Hip Hop Garments The paper will look into controversy that arose over hip hop garment design with the aim of identifying the source of the controversy, key players in the controversy as well as political, social and economic […]
  • Hip Hop Infiltrates Asian Music Industry Therefore, if American hip hop music genre infiltrated Asian music industry and an Asian hip hop music variety was invented then hurdles in Asian hip hop can be conquered.
  • The Beginnings of Hip-Hop Within the course of three decades, hip-hop has become a part of the mainstream culture. This is one of the details that should be considered.
  • The Hip-Hop Genre Origin and Influence Hess, in addition, notes that from 1970s, the development of Hip-hop as a culture has been very complex due to immigrants from different parts of the world, who in one way or another equally contributed […]
  • Hip Hop Dancing: The Remarkable Black Beat Because the drum beats was the most danceable segment of the hip hop music, the hip hop musicians increased their focus on the quality of drum beat sequence.
  • Socio-Political Foundations of Hip-Hop This presentation is connected to a state of exploitation that continues in the world that has deprived people so much, yet the struggle continues.’The sociology and history of African American’ brings out the theme of […]
  • Hip-Hop in Japan However, this was not the case, most of the artists focused on refining their music in the Japanese languages to give it a Japanese flavor.
  • Hip Hop Influence on Youth: Statistics and Effects Hip hop music is also said to perpetuate the rise in criminal activities among the youth. It is therefore recommendable for the youth to shun away from the vice brought about by hip hop music.

📌 Most Interesting Hip Hop Topics to Write about

  • Copula Variation Across Two Decades Of Hip Hop Nation Language
  • How Hip Hop Affect The Way People Think About Politics
  • An Overview of the Talk by Tupac Shakur, an American Hip Hop Artist
  • Bad Influence Of Hip Hop On Youth
  • African American Hip Hop and its Influence
  • Hip Hop Music is More Than a Couple of Words
  • Codes and Abstraction in Hip Hop Culture
  • Black Women’s Role in Popular Culture: An Analysis of The Venus Hip Hop
  • Argumentative Essay On Hip Hop Culture
  • A Comparison of Classical Ballet and Modern Dance – Hip Hop and Jazz Style
  • Should We Accept The Hip Hop Industry Negative Images
  • Hip Hop And Politics: Attacking The Political Powers Of Government
  • Comparison Of Yorkville Crossing : White Teens, Hip Hop
  • Effects Of Hip Hop And Country Music On Society
  • A Description of the Image of Hip Hop/Rap Music
  • Racial Stereotypes Associated With Rap And Hip Hop Music
  • Does Hip Hop Influence Other Parts of the World
  • Music Videos Involving Women And The Hip Hop Industry
  • Hip Hop : The Commodification Of African American Women
  • Hip Hop Culture And Its Impact On The American Society
  • The Assault Of Women In The Hip Hop Community

👍 Good Hip Hop Essay Topics

  • An Analysis of the Performance of American Hip Hop Group, Travis Porter
  • Hip Hop : Beyond Beats And Rhymes By Byron Hurt
  • Gender In Black Media Hip Hop Culture
  • Positive Women in Hip Hop: Feminism in a Patriarchal Society
  • Hip Hop And Rap Has Been The Mainstay For Youth
  • Influences of Hip Hop on Today’s Generation: Rising Deviance
  • Hip Hop’s Influence on Popular Culture: Expression or Oppression
  • An Analysis of Hip Hop and Its Influence on Listeners
  • Essay Hip Hop Music and Music Technology
  • Existentialism Case – Tupac Shakur: Existentialist Hip Hop Artist
  • An Overview of the Rapping and the Hip Hop Culture in the Music of the United States
  • Harlem Renaissance & the Hip Hop Movement
  • An Analysis of the Elements of Hip Hop Culture
  • Contemporary Urban Music: Controversial Messages in Hip Hop and Rap Lyrics
  • Compare and Contrast the Subcultures of Hip Hop
  • Differing Mentalities In Hip Hop And Rock
  • An Analysis of the Music of Talib Kweli, a Hip Hop Artist
  • Hip Hop And Its Effects On African Society
  • Black Films and Hip Hop Music Videos: Race Representation
  • Does Hip Hop Influence Violent Behavior
  • Hip Hop And The Birth Of African American Poetry
  • American History of Hip Hop Culture
  • Does Hip Hop Culture Influence Youth Gangs?
  • Who Does Hip Hop Belong?
  • Does Hip Hop Harm Black Americans?
  • Does Hip Hop Have a Place in the Church?
  • What Is the Hip Hop Style of Music?
  • Does Hip Hop Influence Other Parts of the World?
  • Does Hip Hop Provoke Drug Use and Misogyny?
  • How Does Hip Hop Effect Teenagers?
  • How Does Hip Hop Affects Society?
  • How Does Hip Hop Affect the Way People Think About Politics?
  • How Does Hip Hop Connect With Many Different Real-World Problems?
  • Is Hip Hop Black Culture?
  • How Did Hip Hop Culture Develop During the Seventies?
  • How Hip Hop Culture Remains Superfluous With Overspending?
  • How Hip Hop Music Is a Culture of Resistance?
  • Who Invented Hip Hop?
  • How Hip Hop Negatively Affects Society?
  • How Hip Hop Negatively Influences Today’s Teen?
  • Does Hip Hop Influence Violent Behavior?
  • How Does Hip Hop Promotes Violence?
  • How Does Hip Hop Start?
  • What Has Hip Hop Ever Done?
  • How Have Race and Gender Shown Within the Genres of Hip Hop and Rap?
  • How Did the Backout 1977 Affect Hip Hop?
  • How Are Women Represented in Hip Hop Videos?
  • What Are Different Styles of Hip Hop?
  • Why Do White Kids Love Hip Hop?
  • What Does Hip Hop Stand For?
  • How Has Technology Influenced Hip Hop?
  • Are Hip Hop and Rap the Same?
  • Hobby Research Ideas
  • Ethnicity Research Topics
  • Dance Essay Ideas
  • Inspiration Topics
  • Jazz Research Topics
  • Youth Titles
  • African Americans Paper Topics
  • Graffiti Research Ideas
  • Chicago (A-D)
  • Chicago (N-B)

IvyPanda. (2024, February 28). 133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/hip-hop-essay-examples/

"133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples." IvyPanda , 28 Feb. 2024, ivypanda.com/essays/topic/hip-hop-essay-examples/.

IvyPanda . (2024) '133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples'. 28 February.

IvyPanda . 2024. "133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples." February 28, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/hip-hop-essay-examples/.

1. IvyPanda . "133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples." February 28, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/hip-hop-essay-examples/.

Bibliography

IvyPanda . "133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples." February 28, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/hip-hop-essay-examples/.

IMAGES

  1. Thesis paper on rap music Free Essay Example

    research paper on rap music

  2. Rap Music and Rap Audiences

    research paper on rap music

  3. Rock Vs Rap Research Paper 2022

    research paper on rap music

  4. Essay on Rap Music

    research paper on rap music

  5. History of Rap Music Essay

    research paper on rap music

  6. Exploring Positive Effects of Rap Music Essay Example

    research paper on rap music

VIDEO

  1. designing a paper #rap #song #music #viral #punjabisong #designs #designer

  2. (Free) "Paper" Drill Rap Beat Hip Hop Instrumental Dark -2024

  3. qalam or paper official rap song prod White Mamba

  4. The Influence of Rap Music on Black Teens

  5. #newsong #music #love #rap #craft #diy #viral ₹#youtubeshorts please subscribe my channel #gift

  6. Raw Paper Rap (A Wrap Song)

COMMENTS

  1. Rap Music as a Positive Influence on Black Youth and American Politics

    Wilson, Natalie, "Rap Music as a Positive Influence on Black Youth and American Politics" (2018). Advanced Writing: Pop Culture Intersections. 21.

  2. Rap music, race, and perceptions of crime

    Abstract. Scholars who study rap music have long expressed concerns that criticism of the genre is inextricably linked to stereotypes of young Black men in the United States. Yet minimal research has empirically examined how rap music is linked to race in ways that legitimize and maintain anti-Black attitudes, particularly attitudes related to ...

  3. A Content Analysis of Mental Health Discourse in Popular Rap Music

    References to mental health struggles have increased significantly in popular rap music from 1998 to 2018. Future research is needed to examine the potential positive and negative effects these increasingly prevalent messages may have in shaping mental health discourse and behavioral intentions for US youth.

  4. Hip-hop, identity, and conflict: Practices and transformations of a

    Hip-hop goes hand-in-hand with the transformations of styles, youth culture and urban space. These changes have given new life to the content of rap songs and have encouraged the street art exposition in galleries and the creation of a Decalogue of acrobatic steps to be hanged in dance schools.

  5. Gangsta Rap and the Trapped Mentality

    This research paper provides historical background into the evolution of Hip Hop culture and further investigation into the evolution and foundation of Gangsta Rap music. Throughout this investigation, five recurring fundamental themes are recognized through patterns presented by its pioneers.

  6. (PDF) Rap Music and the Empowerment of Today's Youth: Evidence in

    Results suggest that rap music is a discourse in lifespan development. Rap music's developmental narratives may be used by practitioners, parents and researchers.

  7. Rap Music and the Empowerment of Today's Youth: Evidence ...

    Research questions ask: (1) Does youth self-expression in rap music created within music therapy sessions reflect framework dimensions? (2) Does content in commercially recognizable rap music reflect framework dimensions? (3) How well does the framework align with a model of empowerment-based positive youth development?

  8. "One Day It'll All Make Sense": Hip-Hop and Rap Resources for Music

    This bibliographical essay provides descriptions of a wide array of re- sources relating to hip-hop culture and rap music, and its final section is devoted to the collecting of hip-hop and rap materials by libraries. While. the essay is primarily intended to serve as a guide for music librarians.

  9. Rap Music and Rap Audiences Revisited: How Race Matters in the

    In the current paper, I first detail how both lay critics and social scientists have suggested that censorship might be the best course of action for the music. Afterwards, I report on a program of research designed to examine the themes contained in rap music and investigate the effects of exposure to rap with special attention given to the nature and composition of rap music audiences. Few ...

  10. Rap Music and Its Violent Progeny: America's Culture of ...

    Rarely, however, is an evaluation of rap music placed in the context of a society replete with violence in all its entertainment forms. RAP MUSIC IN THE CONTEXT OF A VIOLENT CULTURE. Rap music is not synonymous with hip-hop but rather a subset of the hip-hop culture (George, 1994; Smitherman, 1997).

  11. Hip-Hop Revolution: The Culture and Politics of Rap on JSTOR

    Hip-Hop Revolution deftly balances an insider's love of the culture with a scholar's detached critique, exploring popular myths about black educational attainment, civic engagement, crime, and sexuality. By cutting to the bone of a lifestyle that many outsiders find threatening, Ogbar makes hip-hop realer than it's ever been before.

  12. Hip Hop Culture: History and Trajectory

    Riesch, R J., "Hip Hop Culture: History and Trajectory" (2005). Research Papers. Paper 32.

  13. Breaking the Gender Gap in Rap/Hip-Hop Consumption

    To frame this analysis, literature on music consumption, specifically in relation to gender and rap as an alternative music genre, has been reviewed from different approaches. An exploratory survey was conducted to obtain an insight into rap/hip-hop consumption and appreciation by gender.

  14. PDF Conflicting Paradigms on Gender and Sexuality in Rap Music: A

    This paper compares literature related to sexuality and gender in rap music from a variety of perspectives such as feminism, cultural studies, and sociology as well as from health and behavioral research in order to deepen understanding of the lyrical content that may influence sexual attitudes and behavior.

  15. Fans of Violent Music: The Role of Passion in Positive and Negative

    Extreme metal and rap music with violent themes are sometimes blamed for eliciting antisocial behaviours, but growing evidence suggests that music with violent themes can have positive emotional, cognitive, and social consequences for fans. We addressed this apparent paradox by comparing how fans of violent and non-violent music respond emotionally to music. We also characterised the ...

  16. Experimental Evaluation of Rap Music Attitudes

    Rap music has been growing in popularity since it emerged on the American cultural scene in the 1970s. In fact, in 2018, rap music surpassed rock as the most popular genre in the United States. This chapter describes research exploring the relationship between rap music and crime. It reviews findings from content analyses and experimental studies addressing concerns about violence and crime in ...

  17. Rap music News, Research and Analysis

    Rap 'beef' as public spectacle is a dangerous game that artists rarely win. A.D. Carson, University of Virginia. Since rap's emergence, artists have boasted about themselves in ways that ...

  18. Microsoft Word

    personhood (Mendoza, 2016). Research concludes that rap music has both positive and negative

  19. Rap music Research Papers

    A research paper about how rap can provoke changes in a society and inspire youth to make a difference. Starting with the history of rap, it is a method tackling social injustice in its many cases such as racism, poverty and sexism.

  20. Women in Rap Songs: A Difference between Male and Female Voices

    This research revealed that a female artist's song promotes woman empowerment while the song written by male artists has more objectification tendencies. This study further implicates the role and ...

  21. Research Paper On Kendrick Lemar

    Research Paper On Kendrick Lemar 1439 Words 6 Pages Isaiah Bates Mr. Beshwate English 102-12 25 April 2024 Kendrick Lamar Uses Poetry In His Songs In today's rap game, only a handful of artists are truly making poetry with their words and influence.

  22. Religion and Rap Music: An Analysis of Black Church Usage

    This study seeks to address this research limitation by examining the inclusion of gospel rap music during Black Church Sunday services, and the demographic and religious indicators that potentially explain its usage, based on a sample of 1,863 Black churches across seven denominations. This endeavor.

  23. ≡Essays on Rap Music. Free Examples of Research Paper Topics, Titles

    Absolutely FREE essays on Rap Music. All examples of topics, summaries were provided by straight-A students. Get an idea for your paper

  24. 133 Hip Hop Topics & Essay Examples

    Looking for exciting hip hop topics to write about? 🥁 We've gathered 🔝 rap topics for essays & research papers. 🎧 133 Hip hop essay examples are added for your inspiration!