Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad
- 2 Autobiography and identity: Malcolm X as author and hero
- 3 Bringing Malcolm X to Hollywood
- 4 Malcolm X and black masculinity in process
- 5 Womanizing Malcolm X
- 6 Malcolm X and the Black Arts Movement
- 7 Malcolm X and African American conservatism
- 8 Malcolm X and youth culture
- 9 Homo rhetoricus Afro-Americanus: Malcolm X and the “rhetorical ideal of life”
- 10 Judgment and critique in the rhetoric of Malcolm X
- 11 Nightmarish landscapes: geography and the dystopian writings of Malcolm X
- 12 Afrocentricity and Malcolm X
- 13 Malcolm X in global perspective
- 14 The legacy of Malcolm X
- Guide to further reading
- Index
8 - Malcolm X and youth culture
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad
- 2 Autobiography and identity: Malcolm X as author and hero
- 3 Bringing Malcolm X to Hollywood
- 4 Malcolm X and black masculinity in process
- 5 Womanizing Malcolm X
- 6 Malcolm X and the Black Arts Movement
- 7 Malcolm X and African American conservatism
- 8 Malcolm X and youth culture
- 9 Homo rhetoricus Afro-Americanus: Malcolm X and the “rhetorical ideal of life”
- 10 Judgment and critique in the rhetoric of Malcolm X
- 11 Nightmarish landscapes: geography and the dystopian writings of Malcolm X
- 12 Afrocentricity and Malcolm X
- 13 Malcolm X in global perspective
- 14 The legacy of Malcolm X
- Guide to further reading
- Index
Summary
This essay explores the legacy of Malcolm X as it is reinterpreted among contemporary young people with an emphasis on his influence on African American Muslim youth in university communities through rap music. Islam has been the iconic religion of hip-hop (rapping, dejaying, breakdancing, and graffiti art) since the beginning of this complex youth-music culture in New York City in the 1970s. Previous studies of Malcolm's influence on hiphop have focused on his early years as a hustler and later as a member of the Nation of Islam with an interpretation that resonates with the urban street-reporting themes of drug dealing and incarceration in gangsta rap. However, analysis of the aspects of Malcolm X's Pan-African internationalist insights and programs in the Muslim Mosque, Inc. and the Organization of Afro-American Unity that are reinterpreted by contemporary rappers and MCs (masters of ceremonies) sheds light on the progressive potential of the music and the complex interrelationship between Islam, hip-hop, and black nationalism in the late-twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The university-based hip-hop audience with regard to the influence of Malcolm X is important for several reasons. Malcolm's Autobiography is now part of the canon of some university curricula and therefore Muslim and non-Muslim youth in university communities have become sophisticated, critical readers of his religious and political philosophies.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Malcolm X , pp. 101 - 112Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010
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