Global Linguistic Flows :Hip Hop Cultures, Youth Identities, and the Politics of Language

Global Linguistic Flows

Global Linguistic Flows :Hip Hop Cultures, Youth Identities, and the Politics of Language

hardback
Published: 4 September, 2008
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Description

Located at the intersection of sociolinguistics and Hip Hop Studies, this cutting-edge book moves around the world – spanning Africa, Asia, Australia, the Americas and the European Union – to explore Hip Hop cultures, youth identities, the politics of language, and the simultaneous processes of globalization and localization. Focusing closely on language, these scholars of sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology, cultural studies, and critical pedagogies offer linguistic insights to the growing scholarship on Hip Hop Culture, while reorienting their respective fields by paying closer attention to processes of globalization and localization.

The book engages complex processes such as transnationalism, (im)migration, cultural flow, and diaspora in an effort to expand current theoretical approaches to language choice and agency, speech style and stylization, codeswitching and language mixing, crossing and sociolinguistic variation, and language use and globalization. Moving throughout the Global Hip Hop Nation, through scenes as diverse as Hong Kong’s urban center, Germany’s Mannheim inner-city district of Weststadt, the Brazilian favelas, the streets of Lagos and Dar es Salaam, and the hoods of the San Francisco Bay Area, this global intellectual cipha breaks new ground in the ethnographic study of language and popular culture.

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780805862836
ISBN10 0805862838
Number Of Pages 272
Item Weight 660 g
Publisher / Reseller Taylor & Francis Inc
Format hardback
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Author's Bio

H. Samy Alim is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles, USA.

Awad Ibrahim is Associate Professor, Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa, Canada.

Alastair Pennycook is Professor of Language Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Technololgy, Sydney, Australia.

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