Negro Soy Yo: Hip Hop and Raced Citizenship in Neoliberal Cuba

Author:   Marc D. Perry
Publisher:   Duke University Press
ISBN:  

9780822359852


Pages:   277
Publication Date:   25 December 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Negro Soy Yo: Hip Hop and Raced Citizenship in Neoliberal Cuba


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Full Product Details

Author:   Marc D. Perry
Publisher:   Duke University Press
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.544kg
ISBN:  

9780822359852


ISBN 10:   0822359855
Pages:   277
Publication Date:   25 December 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

Offering a wealth of ethnographic detail, Negro Soy Yo is a welcome addition to the study of international hip-hop, contemporary Cuban culture and society, and the Black Atlantic. Marc D. Perry's foregrounding of the role of race in the history of Cuban hip-hop, and in the transnational engagements of Afro-Cuban culture more broadly, is a crucial contribution. --Wayne Marshall, coeditor of Reggaeton


Offering a wealth of ethnographic detail, Negro Soy Yo is a welcome addition to the study of international hip-hop, contemporary Cuban culture and society, and the Black Atlantic. Marc D. Perry's foregrounding of the role of race in the history of Cuban hip-hop, and in the transnational engagements of Afro-Cuban culture more broadly, is a crucial contribution. -- Wayne Marshall, coeditor of Reggaeton In this much anticipated book, Marc D. Perry provides a nuanced and compelling analysis of how Cuban raperos are crafting new understandings of black selfhood and citizenship in the wake of the collapse of the USSR and Cuba's ambivalent embrace of neoliberal capitalism. Boldly reflexive, Perry's intensive, long-term ethnographic research yields a theoretically nuanced and historically attuned perspective on the politics and poetics of racialization both within Cuba's rapidly changing political imaginary, and across diasporic fields of black cultural production. By all measures, Negro Soy Yo is a masterful contribution to the literature and an ethnographic tour de force. -- Steven Gregory, author of The Devil behind the Mirror: Globalization and Politics in the Dominican Republic


Perry effectively cuts between lyrics, house parties, run-ins with the police, music festivals, conversations, and theoretical reflections in a multilayered 'raced ethnography' that glistens with his desire to describe an enormous range of details about life in neoliberal Cuba. . . . He contributes wonderfully to Latin American and Caribbean studies, as well as African diaspora studies, cultural studies, cultural anthropology, and ethnomusicology. -- Daniel Castro Pantoja & Jacob Rekedal * Latin American Research Review * Negro Soy Yo provides an insightful and grassroots account of the Cuban hip hop movement's discursive and affirmative evolution in an emerging neoliberal moment. -- Alexandrine Boudreault-Fournier * Journal of Anthropological Research * A necessary guide for understanding the present and future of racialized social stratification [in Cuba]. . . . Perry's most important contribution lies in how he unites the genealogy of Cuban hip-hop with that of the contemporary Cuban anti-racist movement and points sharply toward the political urgency of continued antiracist critiques in the present and future. -- Maya Berry * Latin American Music Review * Negro Soy Yo makes a distinguished contribution to the study of raced citizenship and the performance of blackness through the self-fashioning of Cuban hip-hop. -- Melisa Riviere * Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute * If you're not familiar with Cuban hip hop,Negro Soy Yo is an excellent starting point to get the wheels turning in your head, to start thinking about the music and all of the different places it is coming from, what it's discussing and why. Perry has given us an excellent text to get people from outside of the island to consider how the music communicates things about society that we don't get elsewhere. * Scratched Vinyl *


Author Information

Marc D. Perry is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and African and African Diaspora Studies at Tulane University.

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