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VOLUME
8, NUMBER 1 BACK
TO VOLUMES
PAULA
J. GIDDINGS
Editor’s Preface
I confess
that when Janell Hobson and R. Dianne Bartlow, co-editors of “Representin’ :
Women, Hip-Hop, and Popular Music,” offered to put
together a special issue for Meridians, I was a little skeptical. My view
of hip-hop was Filtered through the lens of its misogyny. Yes,
I knew about oppositional female and political rappers, and
certainly understood how hip-hop and popular music have permeated
youth culture around the world. Still, despite, or perhaps
because of, a growing literature about women and hip-hop, I
wondered if there was an entire volume’s worth of
interesting ideas to explore—and if such an issue could reach the threshold
of what Meridians readers would expect.
The questions
were answered when we received these essays and the Fine introduction
by the co-editors. Indeed, I realized how limited my own thinking
about women and popular music had been. There are so many important
and understudied dimensions to explore, many of which are evocatively
laid out by the contributors to this volume. They write about
the relationship of contemporary popular music to social movements and
identities, including black feminism’s second and third waves, queerness,
and Muslim women. The authors relect on the intersections with transnational
music traditions such as Calypso, Afro-Cuban, and the vocalizations heard
in Hindi ilms. The visual as well as the textual is explored through the
double-voiced discourses of the music’s liberatory and exploitive
potential; corporatism and street subculture; women as objects and
women as subjects; and the politics of complicity and resistance. In short,
the co-editors and contributors have provided what Meridians readers
should expect: a rich volume with a critical edge.
Meridians:
feminism, race, transnationalism 2008, vol. 8, no. 1, p. v] © 2008 by Smith College. All rights reserved.
To purchase this issue contact
Indiana University Press at
www.iupjournals.org/meridians
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