1 / 20

Hip Hop Culture: Beyond the Bling

Hip Hop Culture: Beyond the Bling presented by: Monica Alfonzo Cross Cultural Health Care Program www.xculture.org What is Hip Hop?

jacob
Download Presentation

Hip Hop Culture: Beyond the Bling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hip Hop Culture:Beyond the Bling presented by: Monica Alfonzo Cross Cultural Health Care Program www.xculture.org

  2. What is Hip Hop? “Hip Hop came from hardship, the struggle faced by teens, youngsters, folks who needed a positive outlet. It's that essence which was so contagious — pure, honest and in your face. It was completely different from what was out there." -Khazm 2006 Winner for Seattle’s Excellence in Hip Hop Award

  3. What is Hip Hop?

  4. Hip-hop is a culture. The term is loosely used when referring to commercialized rap music, however hip-hop is more than just music. It is the heartbeat of American ghetto youth who claimed their own self-expression and used it to rise above their physical circumstances. Hip-hop culture has its roots in pride, truth, courage and self-determination. Source: groups.myspace.com/hiphopurban

  5. The Elements of Hip Hop • Rap • Djing • Breakdancing • Graffiti

  6. Rap Music

  7. Rap Music Roots • Attributed to griots of Western Africa • “Toasting” started in NYC during block parties in the early ’70s • Started by DJ Kool Herc, Africa Bambataa Source: Wikipedia.org

  8. Addressing some stereotypes

  9. “Pop Hop” • Typically, rap music played on MTV or radio. • These songs are selected according to what is popular (what will sell) • Not all Pop Hop is bad

  10. “Gangsta Rap” Although crime and violence in the inner city have always been part of hip hop's lyrical canon, before the rise of gangsta rap the subject was not embraced or addressed so blatantly. Source: Wikipedia.org

  11. “I didn’t create Thug Life, I diagnosed it” - Tupac Shakur

  12. Lyrics

  13. Hip Hop is…. An expression of the individual artist’s • Self • Passions • Pet peeves • Reality

  14. Exploring our inner Hip Hop • Who are you??? • What are your passions??? • What are your pet peeves???

  15. Conflict is... …a perceived or actual incompatibility of interests, goals, values, and/or resources that inevitably arise from differences.

  16. Hot Buttons are Triggered When People • Challenge your competence. • Don’t appreciate you. • Communicate in ways that irritate you. • Are condescending. • Give you unsolicited advice. • Are quick to judge. • Don’t respect you.

  17. Cultural Bump... As a result of a personal interaction you are: • confused • frustrated • angry • misunderstood • helpless • hopeless

  18. Person A Emotions Angry Hopeless Helpless Frustrated Confused Misunderstood Depressed Person B Actions Violence Withdrawal Passive-aggressive Blame Substance Abuse Homicide Suicide -Ira SenGupta, 2002 The Negative Cycle of Conflict

  19. Five Steps to Cultural Competency • Awareness of Self and the Other. • Acknowledgement. • Honest Validation. • Negotiation. • Action: Choices and Options. - Ira SenGupta, May, 2000, Health and Healing

  20. "When we made Hip Hop, we made it hoping it would be about peace, love, unity and having fun so that people could get away from the negativity that was plaguing our streets (gang violence, drug abuse, self hate, violence among those of African and Latino descent). Even though this negativity still happens here and there, as the culture progresses, we play a big role in conflict resolution and enforcing positivity.” - Africa Bambaataa Godfather of Hip Hop Founder, Universal Zulu Nation

More Related