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#sociology #music
SPIN.com: Defending Dyson's Georgetown Jay-Z Class
SPIN.com: Defending Dyson's Georgetown Jay-Z Class
‘Jay-Z’s lyrics would work just fine in a literature or poetry class (Decoded is basically his own Norton Critical Anthology of Jigga), but that's irrelevant to this discussion because, as nearly everyone who mocked the course seemed to ignore, Dyson is teaching a Sociology course! And Jay-Z's career is perfectly suited for the study of that discipline.’
·spin.com·
SPIN.com: Defending Dyson's Georgetown Jay-Z Class
Slate: "The rise of no homo and the changing face of hip-hop homophobia" by Jonah Weiner
Slate: "The rise of no homo and the changing face of hip-hop homophobia" by Jonah Weiner
"When these rappers say 'no homo,' it can seem a bit like a gentleman's agreement, nodding to the status quo while smuggling in a fuller, less hamstrung notion of masculinity. This is still a concession to homophobia, but one that enables a less rigid definition of the hip-hop self than we've seen before. It's far from a coup, but, in a way, it's progress."
·slate.com·
Slate: "The rise of no homo and the changing face of hip-hop homophobia" by Jonah Weiner
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People
Why privacy persists. "Along with new visibilities comes social understanding of those new visibilities." "If the end of privacy comes about, it's because we misunderstand the current changes as the end of privacy, and make the mistake of encoding this misunderstanding into technology. It's not the end of privacy because of these new visibilities, but it may be the end of privacy because it looks like the end of privacy because of these new visibilities."
·interconnected.org·
Interconnected: This Isn't a Story I Tell Many People