Black Feminism: Dear Hip Hop ... We're Here episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 10, 2024 · 39 MIN

Black Feminism: Dear Hip Hop ... We're Here

from Intersectionality in the American South · host Intersectionality in the American South

Akua Naru's love for the African diaspora drives her to disrupt and intervene for good through the channel of her Hip Hop music and archival work of The Keeper’s Project. More specifically, the pantheon of black women writers like Toni Morrison, bell hooks, Zora Neal Hurston have provided Naru with a critical black feminist lens and language by which to read the world and retake spaces that push the contributions of black women to Hip Hop to the margins to the center. Living with the words of black feminists, Naru tells her story, helping us rethink the centrality of blackness for identity construction and the potentialities of love within Hip Hop through this podcast.Listen to Akua Naru's music here. Find out where she is performing next here. Follow us on instagram @intersectsouth or visit our website at  https://sites.gsu.edu/intersectsouth/

Akua Naru's love for the African diaspora drives her to disrupt and intervene for good through the channel of her Hip Hop music and archival work of The Keeper’s Project. More specifically, the pantheon of black women writers like Toni Morrison, bell hooks, Zora Neal Hurston have provided Naru with a critical black feminist lens and language by which to read the world and retake spaces that push the contributions of black women to Hip Hop to the margins to the center. Living with the words of...

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Black Feminism: Dear Hip Hop ... We're Here

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This episode is 39 minutes long.

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This episode was published on April 10, 2024.

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Akua Naru's love for the African diaspora drives her to disrupt and intervene for good through the channel of her Hip Hop music and archival work of The Keeper’s Project. More specifically, the pantheon of black women writers like Toni Morrison,...

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