As editors of this book, we seek contributions that
critically address hip-hop archives (both digital and physical) and the
processes of archivization, encompassing theoretical and analytical
perspectives and exploring globally dispersed cases. We particularly welcome
contributions from individuals who are in some way actively engaged in the
development or operation of hip-hop archives in any medium and at any stage or
scale, whether independent collections or institutionally supported
enterprises. We also value the various ways in which hip-hop culture is engaged
from historical and material perspectives, allowing for examination of the
archive as a historical apparatus as well as a contemporary physical assemblage
of artifacts.
This book focuses on the culture and politics involved in
building, maintaining, and researching hip-hop archives. It addresses practical
aspects, including methods of accumulation, curation, preservation, and
digitization and critically analyzes institutional power, community engagement,
urban economics, public access, and the ideological implications associated
with hip-hop culture’s enduring tensions with dominant social values.
Roughly forty-five years since hip-hop culture emerged, a
broad and sizeable array of material artifacts, recorded materials, and various
cultural ephemera has accumulated. Pioneering artists, life-long fans, industry
mavens, and keen collectors have amassed collections of artifacts that are
essential to the definition of localized hip-hop scenes, providing crucial
insights onto the people, places, aesthetics and other often-obscure details
that trace the arc of cultural development. Included in these collections are
photographs, event flyers and posters, recordings (in multiple configurations),
video materials, magazines, clothing and other stylistic signifiers, personal
papers and notebooks, and oral history recordings. These materials, and their
archival existence, have thus far received only scant scholarly attention
within a sustained critical framework and, thus, this book seeks to enhance an
understanding of hip-hip culture more widely by expanding our knowledge and
understanding about the emergent role of hip-hop archives. Archives are
generally a response to a need to actively preserve a culture, allowing for
present and future citizens to access and interpret the evolution of a people’s
innovations and endeavors. Archives encompass facets of heritage and legacy,
merging the temporal past with present and future implications. They are
repositories of cultural histories and, as such, they are also sites for the
amplification of narratives and other representational forms that, in their
diversity, disseminate symbolic values and meanings. At the current cultural
moment, digitization also amplifies the ubiquity and importance of archival
processes in relation to hip-hop’s ongoing vitality. The archiving of hip-hop
culture consequently offers a powerful initiative that simultaneously
celebrates the achievements of cultural forebears while critically engaging
with ideologies, social and political issues, economic forces, and artistic
creativity, repositioning the once-marginal practices and attitude associated
with hip-hop at the center of larger debates about the character of our urban
environments and cultural priorities.
The book aims to present rigorous scholarly research that
critically and theoretically examines hip-hop’s archival turn, including
interrogating the distinctions between small, independent archives and
collections as well as those that feature larger holdings and that are institutionally
located in public and university libraries or national spaces such as the U.S.
Smithsonian Institute. Further emphasis will be placed on the ways in which
hip-hop archives mobilize community involvement, facilitating engagements that
take various shapes and have diverse implications for how local hip-hop scenes
envision themselves and their relationship to the wider hip-hop culture.
Of this latter point, the book strongly advocates for a
global perspective. We invite chapters with a pronounced international
foundation, seeking to draw on the insights and archival practices enacted in
multiple national contexts, exploring the constraining and enabling factors
that arise in dispersed locales.
Deadline for Proposals: 1 April 2019
Proposals should be 250 words
Proposals can be submitted in word.doc format to:
Mark V. Campbell: (mvcampbell@ryerson.car)
Murray Forman: (m.forman@northeastern.edu)
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