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RRACE (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   105367


Change we can believe in: Barack Obama, race and the 2008 US presidential election / Verney, Kevern   Journal Article
Verney, Kevern Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This article addresses two questions. It begins by comparing the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination contest with the 1980s campaigns of Jesse Jackson. It examines the different background and personalities of Obama and Jackson, together with an analysis of what has changed in US political life in the intervening decades, in an attempt to understand why Obama succeeded where the earlier Jackson campaigns failed. The second part of the article analyses the subsequent general election with a view to determining whether Obama's defeat of John McCain should be seen as a result of a unique set of political circumstances, or evidence of the increasing irrelevance of race in US electoral politics. In particular, this discussion assesses the validity of the claims made by some commentators that Obama's victory marks the beginning of a new 'post-racial' era in American political life.
Key Words John McCain  Obama  Rrace  Jesse Jackson  US Electoral Politics 
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2
ID:   085235


Global black self - fashionings: hip hop as diasporic space / Perry, Marc D   Journal Article
Perry, Marc D Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract This essay examines how the "black" racial significance of hip hop culture is received, interpreted, and redeployed within the Afro-Atlantic world. Beyond questions of cultural consumption and reproduction, it is argued that hip hop's expanding global reach has facilitated the contemporary making and moving of black diasporic subjects themselves. Here, African descendant youth in an array of locales use the performative contours of hip hop to mobilize notions of black-self in ways that are at one time both contestive and transcendent of nationally bound racial framings. Hip hop in this way can be seen as enabling a current global (re)mapping of black political imaginaries via social dynamics of diaspora. In pursuing this argument, this essay looks toward hip hop movements in Brazil, Cuba, and South Africa as compelling, yet varying examples of how transnationally attuned identities of blackness are marshaled in the fashioning of diasporic subjects through hip hop.
Key Words Performance  African diaspora  Hip Hop  Rrace  Diasporic Space 
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