From the South Bronx to Israel: Rap Music and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Item

Title
From the South Bronx to Israel: Rap Music and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Identifier
d_2009_2013:807e515b9a40:11059
identifier
10900
Creator
Ben-Ari, Nirit,
Contributor
Irving L. Markovitz | Sujatha Fernandes
Date
2010
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Political science | Mass communication | Music | Hip hop | Israel | Palestine | Zionism
Abstract
Despite its origins with underprivileged youth in America's urban ghettos, popular rap music in Israel is not necessarily connected with underprivileged minorities in Israel. On the contrary, generally speaking, commercially recorded rap music in Israel is either distanced from politics and adheres to a color-blind ideology, or includes expressions of right-wing Jewish nationalism. As a whole, rap music in Israel reproduces and perpetuates the social order as is, and rarely challenge it, notwithstanding moments of subversion. This anomaly---of pro-government, hegemonic rap---is possible in Israel because both rap music and Zionism, the hegemonic ideology, are perceived as an act of resistance, as "revolutionary", and as a claim for justice.;This study also discuss rappers who are Palestinian citizens of Israel, examining how they see rap music as a place to assert claims for a common global experience of marginalization, voicelessness, and oppression that echoes their own struggle. The presence of Palestinian rappers who are citizens of Israel within the hip hop scene highlights that popular rap music in Israel is a tool of Zionist nation-building.;This study shows that popular rap music, like other forms of popular music in Israel, serves as a tool of nation-building. Hence, official institutions find rap useful and co-opt rappers of different political persuasions for purposes of propaganda outside of Israel. Finally, it sheds light on the role of the rapper in society, and of the scholar's value judgments rendered on rap music.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Political Science