Negro soy yo : hip hop and raced citizenship in neoliberal Cuba
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Negro soy yo : hip hop and raced citizenship in neoliberal Cuba
(Refiguring American music)
Duke University Press, 2016
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [255]-272) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In Negro Soy Yo Marc D. Perry explores Cuba's hip hop movement as a window into the racial complexities of the island's ongoing transition from revolutionary socialism toward free-market capitalism. Centering on the music and lives of black-identified raperos (rappers), Perry examines the ways these young artists craft notions of black Cuban identity and racial citizenship, along with calls for racial justice, at the fraught confluence of growing Afro-Cuban marginalization and long held perceptions of Cuba as a non-racial nation. Situating hip hop within a long history of Cuban racial politics, Perry discusses the artistic and cultural exchanges between raperos and North American rappers and activists, and their relationships with older Afro-Cuban intellectuals and African American political exiles. He also examines critiques of Cuban patriarchy by female raperos, the competing rise of reggaeton, as well as state efforts to incorporate hip hop into its cultural institutions. At this pivotal moment of Cuban-U.S. relations, Perry's analysis illuminates the evolving dynamics of race, agency, and neoliberal transformation amid a Cuba in historic flux.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1
1. Raced Neoliberalism: Groundings for Hip Hop 29
2. Hip Hop Cubano: An Emergent Site of Black Life 57
3. New Revolutionary Horizons 91
4. Critical Self-Fashionings and Their Gendering 135
5. Racial Challenges and the State 171
6. Whither Hip Hop Cubano? 199
Postscript 235
Notes 239
References 255
Index 273
by "Nielsen BookData"