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[ecrea] Final Call for Papers: Hip Hop Studies Conference, University of Cambridge
Mon Feb 29 18:41:13 GMT 2016
DEADLINE for proposals: 4th March.
REGISTRATION: opening in March/April. Email (jrb86 /at/ cam.ac.uk) if you would
like to be added to the conference news mailing list.
‘It Ain’t Where You’re From, It’s Where You’re At’: International Hip
Hop Studies Conference
Wolfson College, University of Cambridge
23-24 June 2016
http://hiphopstudies.org
Keynote speakers:
Tricia Rose, Brown University
Murray Forman, Northeastern University
The AHRC ‘Performing hip hop Englishness’ project, in collaboration with
Wolfson College at the University of Cambridge, is pleased to invite
proposals for papers to be presented at the international hip hop
studies conference ‘It ain’t where you’re from, it’s where you’re at’.
It ain’t where you’re from:
The line ‘it ain’t where you’re from, it’s where you’re at’, from
Rakim’s ‘In the Ghetto’, has become a commonly articulated hip hop trope
that can be variously understood as a way of emphasizing one’s location
and action in the moment, as well as privileging one’s orientation over
one’s ontology. How can we, as scholars from diverse disciplinary
backgrounds working in the field of hip hop studies, interpret this
phrase? How far can it take us? What does it obscure? What is the role
of negation in the construction of hip hop’s various histories, its
cultural politics, and its re-territorialisations?
It’s where you’re at:
The line ‘it ain’t where you’re from, it’s where you’re at’ can also be
used to highlight the roles of artistic skill, cosmopolitan awareness,
and critical engagement with the local. How can an emphasis on ‘where
you’re at’ help us to understand the ethics and aesthetics of hip hop?
What relevance does the privileging of orientation have to the
development of hip hop studies as an interdisciplinary field? We
encourage papers that shed light on this phrase and its implications for
hip hop culture and hip hop studies, particularly in relation to issues
of place, space, temporality, language, ethnicity, ethics, and politics.
Where are we at?
Over the last four decades hip hop has grown to become one of the most
popular cultural forms and practices across the globe. As hip hop
evolves so too does hip hop studies. However, the trajectory of hip hop
studies is not only dependent on the changing nature of its object of
study but also its own methods, theories and contexts. What should hip
hop scholars be doing now and in the future? This conference will
attempt to take stock of where both hip hop and we as hip hop scholars
are at.
We invite proposals (title and abstract) of no more than 200 words for
20 minute papers. Please send submissions to the conference convener,
James Butterworth ((jrb86 /at/ cam.ac.uk)), by 4th March 2016. Acceptances will
be issued by mid-March.
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