Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) K. Adams , K. Drakulich , Nicholas Stoia
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Indiana University School of Social Work, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA, Duke University Press
ANO 2018
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Race and Justice
ISSN 2153-3687
E-ISSN 2153-3695
EDITORA Sage Publications
DOI 10.1177/2153368716688739
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 f3809fe16bc76a99a9342f8ee6588534

Resumo

Recent scholarship has shed light on the troubling use of rap lyrics in criminal trials. Prosecutors have interpreted defendants' rap lyrics as accurate descriptions of past behavior or in some cases as real threats of violence. There are at least two problems with this practice: One concerns the interpretation of art in a legalistic context and the second involves the targeting of rap over other genres and the role of racism therein. The goal of the present work is translational, to demonstrate the relevance of music scholarship on this topic to criminologists and legal experts. We highlight the usage of lyric formulas, stock lyrical topics understood by musicians and their audiences, many of which make sense only in the context of a given genre. The popularity of particular lyric formulas at particular times appears connected to contemporaneous social conditions. In African American music, these formulas have a long history, from blues, through rock and roll, to contemporary rap music. The work illustrates this through textual analyses of lyrics identifying common formulas and connecting them to relevant social factors, in order to demonstrate that fictionalized accounts of violence form the stock-in-trade of rap and should not be interpreted literally.

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