"A Different Type of Time": Hip Hop, Fugitivity, and Fractured Temporality

Journal of Hip Hop Studies 8 (1):63-88 (2021)
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Abstract

In this article, I seek to explore Hip Hop as an expression of marronage. I identify marronage as an existential mode of being which restitutes human temporality. Slavery and flight from slavery constituted two inextricable historical processes, therefore logics of marronage must also constitute contemporary human experience. I argue that Hip Hop offers a distinct way of affirming and expressing one’s existence through what has been called a “maroon consciousness.” In the same way that maroons created new worlds free from the tyranny of slavery, Hip Hop offers the Hip Hoppa a space free from colonial logics.

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Pedro Lebrón Ortiz
University of Puerto Rico

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References found in this work

The souls of Black folk.W. E. B. Du Bois - 2007 - Oxford University Press.
The Racial Triangulation of Asian Americans.Claire Jean Kim - 1999 - Politics and Society 27 (1):105-138.
Reconstructing Locality through Marronage.Pedro Lebrón Ortiz - 2020 - American Philosophical Association Newsletter on Native American and Indigenous Philosophy 20 (1):3-11.

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