1- “We Gon’ Be Alright: Kendrick Lamar, Black Experience and the Politics of Rap” - Maddy Warlow, Carleton University
Quand:
1:30 PM, Vendredi 24 Mai 2019
(2 heures)
Pauses:
Pause café 03:30 PM à 04:00 PM (30 minutes)
Où:
Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) -
DS-1520
Comment:
America’s reflections
of me, that’s what a mirror does”, an indicative take on black representation
by popular rap artist Kendrick Lamar. The emergence of rap music as a cultural
form has provided an important genre and site of analysis for cultural studies
as a way to better understand black experience, representation and oppression
in North America. Rap music emerged in the 1970s as a counterculture to
popular disco and has evolved over the decades as a result of changing
political and racial discourses. Artists such as N.W.A, Childish Gambino, and
Kendrick Lamar are seen as monumental figures in the progression of music that
works with black rights movements to portray black experience. How does Lamar’s
music both complements the Black Lives Matter movement, while also existing as
a site of protest within itself? The paper forwards the relation of music and
politics, examining how they are used to strengthen and complement each other
in order to raise awareness of racial oppression and subvert dominant
narratives while both negotiating and redefining racializing stereotypes. The
work of Stuart Hall (Jhally 1997) and critiques of race, stereotypes and
signification used, work to explain the success and implementation of the
multiple modalities of race that Lamar employs and how his songs and
performances work to mobilize the BLM movement. As politics continue to
influence and shape public perceptions, it is critically important to look at
media that work to redefine and subvert hegemonic norms, while mobilizing a
wide critique on the visibility of racialization.