By Kermit E. Campbell
Paper - 9780814329252
Price: $24.95s
Subjects: Africana Studies: Language and Culture
Series: African American Life Series
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Published by Wayne State University Press
“Kermit Campbell addresses hip-hop and African American vernacular not merely as elements of folk and popular cultures but as rhetoric worthy of serious scrutiny…Campbell’s work shows the persistence and force of the vernacular tradition in the face of increasing criticism from the American mainstream…itself infused with the hip-hop idiom and a style free of academic jargon, the book presents a provocative contribution to cultural and rhetorical studies.”
— Colgate Scene
“What Campbell does with the idea of vernacular discourses as related to Hip hop is highly original. He not only makes the case—quite rigorously—that African American vernacular discourses, particularly Hip hop, are worthy objects for scholarly scrutiny, but his own vernacular-inflected prose is powerful ‘testifyin’ for the efficacy of his perspective. The topic is timely, definitely important in terms of practical applications, and Campbell, because of his unique and thorough grounding in both the African American vernacular and the Western rhetorical traditions, can address it in sparkling fashion.”
— Keith Gilyard, Pennsylvania State University, author of Liberation Memories: The Rhetoric and Poetics of John Oliver Killens