2.3-Turner

Hip Hop as Cultural Capital: Remixing Bourdieu’s Theory to Affirm Cultural Wealth

Milanika Turner

Publication: Volume 2 Issue 3

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Abstract

Despite their popularity in the United States of America, rap music and hip hop culture are misunderstood by many and often characterized as violent, misogynistic, vulgar, and/or venomous. Furthermore, scholarly examinations of rap music rarely emerge from within the actual culture, even though an insider’s perspective could yield valuable emic knowledge. The objective of this study is to assess the cultural value of hip hop and rap through a content analysis of popular music. Billboard music charts provide data on music trends by compiling the most popular rap  songs for six years (2006–2011) ranked by sales, radio airplay, and audience impressions. Stratified random sampling of just over five percent of the population (N = 215) generated the subset for this pilot study (n = 12). Lyrics of all songs in the sample have been analyzed through the lens of Critical Race Theory along six forms of cultural capital
identified in literature: aspirational, linguistic, social, familial, resistant, and navigational. This has made it possible to reframe the discourse on hip hop and rap by establishing how the music operates as cultural capital, as well as commands respect for and establishes the legitimacy of the knowledge and products generated within hip hop culture.

Keywords: Hip Hop, Cultural Capital, Popular Culture, Critical Race Theory, Popular Music

Milanika Turner (milanika.turner@famu.edu) is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University in Tallahassee, U.S.A. She earned a PhD in sociology from Howard University with a concentration in social inequality. Her dissertation centered on environmental justice and the impact of uncontrolled environmental hazards on urban communities which vary by race and class. She has since taught sociology and cultural anthropology courses at various institutions. Her research interests also include African-American history and culture as well as dark tourism.