3- On Wagner, Disney, Canada, Basketball, Hip Hop, Becoming, and Drake - Jordan Zalis, Memorial 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:
Hip hop and basketball are entangled, associated, and imbued with a
sense of urban currency. In Canada, this is exemplified in the “This That New
Toronto,” versus “Old Stock Canadian” identity debate. Where the relationship
between hip hop and basketball crystallized forty years ago in the United
States, today their markets and market-sharing represent platforms for branding
identity. In 2013, for example, the Toronto Raptors, Canada’s only National
Basketball Association (NBA) team hired hip hop icon and cosmopolitan celebrity,
Drake, as their “Global Brand Ambassador.” In that, the entertainer now acts as
the key figure in the city’s (and nation’s) hip hop/basketball culture and mediates
“Toronto” (read: “Canada”) as it is idealized, represented, mediated, understood
by others, and, more meaningfully, believed. As such, this paper takes the
official relationship between the musician and the basketball team seriously.
First, arguing that the multimodal expression of Canadian identity—the “We The
North,” “Drake-as-Canada’s totality”—is in line with Wagner’s (1859) art-work
of the future (Gesamtkunstwerk), this
paper takes a critical stance against its monolithic expression. Second, the
analysis goes one step further, and presents the results of an open, axial,
coded, thematic analysis of the musician’s lyrics, post 2013, to examine if and
how “Drake as Canada’s” hip hop/basketball idea meshes with Giroux’s (1994),
Zipes’ (2011), and Brode’s (2015) theories of hyper-capitalist cross-market
expansion: promoting innocence and moral virtue vis-à-vis multiculturalist
liberalism, described as a “Disneyfication/Disneyization” of everything. Here, the
idea is discussed with reference to the NBA, Canada, and Drake.