Home Music The Real Hiphop
book: The Real Hiphop
Book
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

The Real Hiphop

Battling for Knowledge, Power, and Respect in the LA Underground
  • Marcyliena Morgan
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2009
View more publications by Duke University Press

About this book

An in-depth analysis of the language and culture of Project Blowed, a legendary hiphop workshop based in Los Angeles.

Author / Editor information

Marcyliena Morgan, Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University, is the founder and executive director of the Hiphop Archive and the author of Language, Discourse, and Power in African American Culture.

Reviews

“Executive director of The HipHop Archive and one of the leading scholars of hip-hop culture, Morgan has written a thorough, inspiring ethnographic study that looks at West Coast hip-hop culture through the lens of the underground venue known as Project Blowed. . . . The book’s strengths are the numerous fascinating primary sources, especially the excerpts of rhymes recited during battles at Project Blowed and its introductory chapter, in which Morgan offers the best concise scholarly history to date of hip-hop. Essential.” - A.-P. Durand, Choice

“Youth across the globe have been marginalized, abused, neglected, and incarcerated, but Marcyliena Morgan gives hope to current and future generations by providing background on the start of hip-hop and revealing its multifaceted layers. . . . The Real Hiphop is a testament to the versatile creativity of underground artists who use words to make change.” - Nicolette Westfall, Feminist Review blog

The Real Hiphop is a book written with the eyes of an ethnographer, the ears of a true hip hop head, and the love of a scholar whose commitment to her subject runs broad and deep. By chronicling the history of an unfairly neglected underground music scene and by championing the potentially transformative influence of a popular music genre more broadly upon the academy, it offers a significant contribution to popular music studies.” - Adam Bradley, Journal of Popular Music Studies

“Given the book’s layered treatment of underground hiphop and its practitioners, The Real Hiphop is a strong ethnographic and analytical treatment that is well positioned to be of use to students and scholars across
a number of disciplines.” - Raymond Codrington, American Ethnologist

“Morgan’s musings on power, language, and mistrust feel no less pertinent now than they must have a dozen years ago in Leimart Park.” - Nate Chinen, Pennsylvania Gazette

“Marcyliena Morgan’s high-level analysis and incisive explication of how underground hiphop works centers on two brilliant, ethnographic chapters on Project Blowed, one focusing on a Thursday-night MC battle (chapter three) and one on young women’s negotioations of race and feminism in the social world of underground hiphop and in relation to the sexualization of women in commercial hiphop (chapter four).” - Michael Nevin Willard, Southern California Quarterly

The Real Hiphop is a powerful argument for hiphop’s continuing salience and centrality to any serious discussion about the state of contemporary Black life. Marcyliena Morgan unearths the socio-cultural particularities of hiphop as a dynamic musical genre and a complex way of life, and she links her analysis to the ethnographic particulars of Los Angeles, which crackles to life from the opening vignette.”—John L. Jackson Jr., author of Harlemworld: Doing Race and Class in Contemporary Black America

“In The Real Hiphop, Marcyliena Morgan has written a brilliant account of the origins of hiphop and the process through which it is created and evolves, from its most elemental and raw forms into the highly processed and polished versions that have become the lingua franca of popular American culture over the past few decades. Using her considerable skills as an linguistic anthropologist, Morgan—the founder of the world’s only hiphop archive—raises the analysis of hiphop to an entirely new level of scholarship, explicating it as a linguistic, sociological, and political phenomenon. This book is full of astonishing insights and subtle analysis. It is a must read for any student or scholar seeking to understand what is arguably the most important popular cultural phenomenon in the past thirty years.”—Henry Louis Gates Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University

The Real Hiphop is a book written with the eyes of an ethnographer, the ears of a true hip hop head, and the love of a scholar whose commitment to her subject runs broad and deep. By chronicling the history of an unfairly neglected underground music scene and by championing the potentially transformative influence of a popular music genre more broadly upon the academy, it offers a significant contribution to popular music studies.”

-- Adam Bradley Journal of Popular Music Studies

“Executive director of The HipHop Archive and one of the leading scholars of hip-hop culture, Morgan has written a thorough, inspiring ethnographic study that looks at West Coast hip-hop culture through the lens of the underground venue known as Project Blowed. . . . The book’s strengths are the numerous fascinating primary sources, especially the excerpts of rhymes recited during battles at Project Blowed and its introductory chapter, in which Morgan offers the best concise scholarly history to date of hip-hop. Essential.”

-- A.-P. Durand Choice

“Given the book’s layered treatment of underground hiphop and its practitioners, The Real Hiphop is a strong ethnographic and analytical treatment that is well positioned to be of use to students and scholars across a number of disciplines.”

-- Raymond Codrington American Ethnologist

“Marcyliena Morgan’s high-level analysis and incisive explication of how underground hiphop works centers on two brilliant, ethnographic chapters on Project Blowed, one focusing on a Thursday-night MC battle (chapter three) and one on young women’s negotioations of race and feminism in the social world of underground hiphop and in relation to the sexualization of women in commercial hiphop (chapter four).”

-- Michael Nevin Willard Southern California Quarterly

“Morgan’s musings on power, language, and mistrust feel no less pertinent now than they must have a dozen years ago in Leimart Park.”

-- Nate Chinen Pennsylvania Gazette

“Youth across the globe have been marginalized, abused, neglected, and incarcerated, but Marcyliena Morgan gives hope to current and future generations by providing background on the start of hip-hop and revealing its multifaceted layers. . . . The Real Hiphop is a testament to the versatile creativity of underground artists who use words to make change.”

-- Nicolette Westfall Feminist Review blog


Publicly Available Download PDF
i

Publicly Available Download PDF
vii

Publicly Available Download PDF
ix

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
1

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
21

Building Hiphop Culture and Language
Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
47

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
85

Real Women, Tough Politics, and Female Science
Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
131

‘‘Respect Due’’
Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
161

Enter the KAOS
Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
185

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
195

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
197

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
207

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
211

Requires Authentication Unlicensed

Licensed
223

Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
April 13, 2009
eBook ISBN:
9780822392125
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
224
Other:
16 photographs
Downloaded on 25.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780822392125/html
Scroll to top button