Professor鈥檚 research examines how Southern hip-hop highlights Black culture

KENNESAW, Ga. | Feb 18, 2021

Regina Bradley
Regina Bradley

To Regina Bradley, Southern hip-hop is more than just about music; it is a means to understanding Black culture, and it offers an opportunity to engage in a dialogue around race.

Bradley, assistant professor of and ,  researches how Southern hip-hop influences perspectives on Black history and social issues in the South.

鈥淏eing in the South, there is a high regard for the civil rights movement and for those who participated, but I think the challenge is continuing to have those difficult conversations about race, anxiety and place in America, especially in the South,鈥 Bradley said. 鈥淪outhern hip-hop definitely opens up the door to do that, and does so in a way that engages a more contemporary audience and demographic.鈥

Bradley鈥檚 research posits that Southern hip-hop helps to bridge the gap between the civil rights movement and the present day, allowing people to understand the relevance of past events through contemporary language. To Bradley, the group Outkast was the first hip-hop group to be recognized as being distinctly Southern, and the group鈥檚 success was significant because they engage questions that young, Black Southerners deal with 鈥 which in turn begins a dialogue.

Bradley鈥檚 upcoming book, Chronicling Stankonia: The Rise of the Hip-Hop South, probes the ways music, literature, and film have remixed southern identities for a post鈥揷ivil rights generation. The title of the book pays tribute to Outkast鈥檚 fourth studio album that was released in 2000. The book will be released February 22.

Stankonia chronicles how Southern hip-hop helps us document the South after the civil rights movement,鈥 said Bradley. 鈥淚鈥檓 hoping the book opens the door for more engaged and in-depth analysis of Southern rap, and how it helps us think about race, regional identity and the world today.鈥

To hear more about Bradley鈥檚 research, listen to the hosted by KSU鈥檚 .


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