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Black Collegian News & Views
Hip-Hop Students Learn to Think to the Beat
By Anthony Anamelechi
Black College Wire
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Photo credit: The Daily Orange/David J. Murphy
Lil' Kim visiting a Syracuse University class studying her music
in 2004. Only a handful of historically black colleges and
universities carry courses on hip-hop. |
Once the beat drops, many listeners snap their fingers or twist their
bodies from side to side. But whether they’re shaking their tail
feathers, shoulder leaning or going dumb, even fans of the music don't
understand how much it relates to the black experience.
Bryon D. Turman, lecturer of composition, humanities and hip-hop, is
trying to remedy that at North Carolina A&T State University, where he
teaches about hip-hop for the English Department.
“These courses reveal the black creativity link from the beginning
until now — making the connection from the African griot to the MC,”
said Turman.
The course, "Topics in Literature: The History, Literary Connections,
and Social Relevance of Hip Hop," is designed to give students an
understanding of the place of hip-hop in the oral tradition, which
originated in Africa. Hip-hop "is not just what developed in the Bronx
in 1972,” said Turman, 37, who is also the father of an 11-year-old
daughter and 9-year-old son.
Turman said such elements as call and response, drums and hip-hop's
polyrhythms can be found in African folk, jazz, blues and gospel music.
"We are able to see the origins of hip hop . . . it's Western
European, West African, and African American all culminating to a
certain base of hip-hop," Matthew Melvin, a senior psychology major last
year, said in the A&T Register.
The hip-hop course was developed by Turman last year as an answer to
a university-wide initiative to improve the writing and
critical-thinking skills of A&T students. Turman said students and
faculty initially believed the course would be nothing more than a
listener appreciation course.
Although the lessons do discuss “who’s the best rapper: Biggie, Tupac
or Nas?” Turman said hip-hop covers so much more that it should be
taught at all historically black colleges and universities. In addition
to asking students to critique rap songs, the survey course teaches
students to study art and sharpen their thinking through writing.
Students must write critical essays, reviewing songs heard in class.
Turman said the students learn literary terminology while doing these
exercises.
“Hip-hop has many similarities to poetry,” said Turman. Rap music has
as much figurative language “as a Shakespearian sonnet or William Blake
poem,” he said. Students are taught to identify literary devices within
the lyrics, from similes — comparisons between two or more things — to
alliteration, a string of words that all begin with same sound.
"Topics in Literature: The History, Literary Connections, and Social
Relevance of Hip Hop" is taught in five separate units.
- "Black Expression" touches on the legacy of the oral tradition
from Africa to the post-slavery period.
- "The Black Aesthetic and the Birth of Hip-Hop" discusses such
endeavors as the Black Arts Movement and the Harlem Renaissance. It
also discusses hip-hop and its political ties and explores hip-hop
as a form of resistance.
- "The Big Bang - Hip-Hop as Social Commentary" takes up
Afrocentrism in hip-hop. This unit explores the beginning of
“gangsta rap,” what makes for commercial appeal in the hip-hop world
and the emergence of BET, MTV and music videos.
- "Hip-Hop in the 21st Century" recognizes the use of technology
in hip-hop along with the influence of women and the globalization
of the culture. It poses the question, “Whose culture is it?”
- "Hip-Hop Discourse" wraps up the course with discussion of
hip-hop in the academy and hip-hop in the mainstream. It concludes
with a discussion on the future of the form.
North Carolina A&T is not the only school that deems hip-hop a worthy
classroom subject. Hip-hop courses are taught on such campuses as Penn
State, Temple University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Indiana
State University and Syracuse University. Syracuse has a
course based solely on Lil’ Kim.
"In the last 30 years, I can't think of too many institutions that
have had the same impact on black consciousness as hip-hop,"
Greg
Thomas, who teaches the Lil' Kim course at Syracuse, told the
Syracuse Post-Standard. "Who has done more to teach people and to
iconize, for example, Malcolm X, black power and the anti-apartheid
movement in South Africa? Hip-hop has taught and disseminated black
messages and black history to the masses in a way that other
institutions didn't."
However, only a handful of HBCUs carry such courses. They include
Morgan State and North Carolina Central universities. Central's hip-hop
course has been taught not only by university faculty, but by producer
Patrick Douthit, known as
9th Wonder, and Christopher “Play” Martin from the group
Kid 'n Play.
In Washington, Howard University has been involved with a program
with neighboring Banneker Senior High School, promoting discussions on
hip-hop and its influence on the current and future generations. Howard
is discussing adding a course on the subject, the purpose of a
symposium held in March.
At that symposium, Joshua Kondwani Wright, a Ph.D. student who
chaired the event, said, “Hip-hop has increasing political, economic,
spiritual and cultural influence on youth. Unfortunately, it is
currently receiving more attention for its association with violence,
materialism and misogyny.”
Hip-hop courses "warrant critical analysis at Howard University just
as it is being analyzed at other institutions,” Wright said.
Posted Aug. 27, 2006
Anthony Anamelechi, a Black College Wire intern,
is a student at Florida A&M University. |