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Hill, Marc Lamont – Urban Education, 2018
In this article, I examine the role of Black Twitter as a "digital counterpublic" that enables critical pedagogy, political organizing, and both symbolic and material forms of resistance to anti-Black state violence within the United States. Focusing primarily on post-Ferguson events, I spotlight the ways that Black people have used…
Descriptors: Social Media, Critical Theory, Racial Bias, African Americans
Hill, Marc Lamont – Teachers College Press, 2009
For over a decade, educators have looked to capitalize on the appeal of hip-hop culture, sampling its language, techniques, and styles as a way of reaching out to students. But beyond a fashionable hipness, what does hip-hop have to offer our schools? In this revelatory new book, Marc Lamont Hill shows how a serious engagement with hip-hop culture…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Music, Instruction, Self Concept
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Hill, Marc Lamont; Perez, Biany; Irby, Decoteau J. – English Journal, 2008
Street fiction is a popular new genre of novels that focus on contemporary urban life. Marc Lamont Hill, Biany Perez, and Decoteau J. Irby introduce this genre, describing what it is, who writes it, and who reads it. They also offer critiques of the genre and strategies for linking street fiction to the English classroom. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Urban Culture, Novels, English Instruction, Literary Genres
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Hill, Marc Lamont – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2009
This article examines the salience of collective "memory" and "remembering" among a group of students in Hip-Hop Lit, a hip-hop centered English literature course that I co-taught at "Howard High School," an urban high school in the Northeastern United States. Specifically, this article examines the memory work that occurred within Hip-Hop Lit in…
Descriptors: English Literature, Memory, Popular Culture, High Schools
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Hill, Marc Lamont – Teachers College Record, 2009
Background/Context: Over the past 5 years, there has been a growing body of scholarship that examines the intersections of hip-hop culture and classroom pedagogy. Although recent scholarship has persuasively demonstrated the classroom potential of hip-hop texts for promoting student engagement, scaffolding sanctioned forms of knowledge, and…
Descriptors: English Literature, Consciousness Raising, Power Structure, Critical Theory