From Black Power to Hip Hop: Racism, Nationalism, and Feminism

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From Black Power to Hip Hop: Racism, Nationalism, and Feminism is a scholarly book by sociologist Patricia Hill Collins that examines how race, gender, and nationalism intersect in U.S. politics and popular culture, particularly within Black communities.

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Predicate Object
instanceOf book
scholarly book
academicDiscipline cultural studies
political science
sociology
addresses Black women’s political activism
gendered dimensions of nationalism
media representations of Black femininity
media representations of Black masculinity
structural racism in the United States
author Patricia Hill Collins NERFINISHED
contributionTo African-American intellectual history
cultural analysis of hip hop
feminist theory
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
examines Black Power movement NERFINISHED
Black feminist thought NERFINISHED
hip hop culture
intersections of race, gender, and nationalism
politics of respectability
racialized gender norms
representations of Blackness in popular culture
focusesOn Black communities in the United States
genre African-American studies NERFINISHED
cultural studies
gender studies
sociology
language English
mainSubject Black nationalism NERFINISHED
U.S. politics
feminism
intersectionality
popular culture
racism
notableFor analyzing race, gender, and nation as interconnected systems of power
linking Black Power era politics to contemporary hip hop culture
relatedWorkOfAuthor Black Feminist Thought NERFINISHED
Black Sexual Politics NERFINISHED
theoreticalFramework Black feminist theory
critical race theory
intersectionality
usedIn university courses on African-American studies
university courses on gender studies
university courses on sociology

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Patricia Hill Collins notableWork From Black Power to Hip Hop: Racism, Nationalism, and Feminism