The Influence Of Hip Hops Misogyny And Violence

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The question I’m setting out to research for this paper is whether or not Hip Hop promotes misogyny and violence. This question implies several further questions that must be answered in order to come to a conclusion, these questions being, what is Hip Hop, what is misogyny, and what is violence? To answer these questions, I’ve chosen these six sources using the John Jay database, and I will explain what each source reveals and how it relates and answers my questions that will, ultimately, help to draw a conclusion in the finalized research paper. The first source is the article, “The Influence of Rap and Hip-Hop Music: An Analysis on Audience Perceptions of Misogynistic Lyrics,” which is from the scientific journal, Elon Journal of Undergraduate Research in …show more content…

With this article, Lamotte details the early history of Hip Hop with a focus centered on Afrika Bambaataa, who founded the Universal Zulu Nation (UZN). The UZN was founded as an organization to promote peace and positivity through the usage of Hip Hop, which, at the time, merely consisted of block parties in The Bronx. These block parties were initially gang led, with different styles of Hip Hop existing amongst different gangs, but Bambaataa succeeded in bringing these gangs together peacefully. This formed the basis for Hip Hop as both a musical genre, as each assimilated gang combined their techniques, and a cultural movement, as Bambaataa intended Hip Hop to provide a peaceful outlet for those in underprivileged communities a chance to speak. Because of this, Lamotte argues that the Hip Hop of today is, “exported far beyond its original social context,” (692) with genres such as Gangsta Rap or Trap Rap that seem to promote endless controversy is, he argues, is not what Hip Hop is

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