Scarecrow Press
Pages: 176
Trim: 5¾ x 8½
978-0-8108-4431-5 • Paperback • October 2002 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
978-1-4616-5689-0 • eBook • October 2002 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
Alain-Philippe Durand is Associate Professor of French, Film Studies, and Comparative Literature at the University of Rhode Island, Kingston and Visiting Professor of Cultural Studies, International Business Program, at the Euromed School of Management, Marseille, France.
Chapter 1 Foreword: Francophone Hip-Hop as a Colonial Urban Geography
Chapter 2 Acknowledgments
Chapter 3 Introduction
Chapter 4 Two Decades of Rap in France: Emergence, Developments, Prospects
Chapter 5 Musical Dimensions and Ways of Expressing Identity in French Rap: The Groups from Marseilles
Chapter 6 Common Partitions. Musical Commonplaces
Chapter 7 'Why Are We Waiting to Start the Fire?' French Gangsta Rap and the Critique of State Capitalism
Chapter 8 Rap and the Combinatorial Logistics of Rogues
Chapter 9 Social Stakes and New Musical Styles: Rap and Hip-Hop Cultures
Chapter 10 Tags and Murals in France: A City's Face or Natural Landscape?
Chapter 11 Hip-Hop Dance: Emergence of a Popular Art Form in France
Chapter 12 Rap in Libreville, Gabon. An Urban Sociolinguistic Space
Chapter 13 The Cultural Paradox of Rap Made in Quebec
Chapter 14 Index
Chapter 15 About the Editor
Chapter 16 About the Contributors
The first book in English devoted entirely to Francophone rap, and as such aims at filling an important gap…the wide range of relevant approaches used in most of the essays, as well as the variety of issues discussed by their authors are worth, I think, an attentive reading.
— Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association
A valuable addition to the growing body of academic literature in English on non-Anglophone hip-hop outside the USA.
— European Journal Of Communication
This interdisciplinary volume should make the field of French/francophone hip-hop more accessible to Anglophone readers, particularly those who may wish to embark upon comparative studies of hip-hop culture around the world.
— Modern and Contemporary France
...a very useful work for future research on the ethnology of hip-hop.
— Anthropologie Et Sociétés
...for those among us who enjoy teaching popular music in our French classes to increase student vocabulary, improve student pronunciation, and introduce students to contemporary Francophone culture, Black, Blanc, Beur provides the essential background information for the instructor. Black, Blanc, Beur does an excellent job of introducing the uninitiated into the world of Francophone rap music from an interdisciplinary angle....particularly noteworthy is the explanation by Durand in his introduction on the volume's title.
— The French Review