Black Bourgeoisie: A Cultural And Social Movement

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There have been a myriad of cultural movements derived from new music forms, which shaped American society and its denizens. From the emergence of the Jazz Age and the Roaring Twenties to the Rock and Roll era, these movements serve as historic narratives for the economic, social, and at times, political climate of the country. Decades later, Americans are still impacted by these movements from the continuous packaging and marketing of youth culture birthed from the Rock and Roll era to the liberation of women celebrated by way of the flappers during the Jazz Age. And like those that have come before it, Hip Hop, as a cultural and social movement, has also deeply impacted the American psyche from the dramatic shifts in popular music, the continuation …show more content…

E. Franklin Frazier closely examined the black upper and middle class as well as revealing what distinguished them from their white counterparts but more importantly, the black lower class. This close examination is telling specifically in the ways that blacks disassociate themselves from one another while assimilating into the dominant American culture. Like Dr. Frazier, I would like to closely examine Hip Hop’s elite, which has been examined from every other spectrum but their emergence as the new black …show more content…

In addition, I will track the journey of the new black bourgeoisie from their earlier dwellings in inner cities stricken with poverty, drugs, crime, and broken families to the upper echelon of American society. Lastly, I will examine and answer numerous questions including: What are the connections from earlier upper crust blacks to the existing ones? What role does gender play in the evolution of the newer black bourgeoisie with the majority of its members being men? How does the lack of higher education among the new members reshape the traditional standards of the black bourgeoisie? Is there a division between the old and new members? How did globalization and the aftermath of the Civil Rights Movement allow Hip Hop’s bourgeoisie to create an industry that catapulted them into unprecedented wealth and status? Have the new black bourgeoisie used their power and persuasion to eliminate the dividing racial color lines that earlier members were trying to tear down? When did they emerge? Why are they significant? Do they serve as brokers as Dr. Mary Pattillo defined in Black on the Block between lower class blacks and upper crust whites to improve conditions still plaguing African Americans? How have the members of this modern urban gilded age used their influence to help elect President Barack Obama? What do their

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