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Contribution to Book
Chronic Mobb Asks a Blessing: Apocalyptic Hip-Hop in a Time of Crisis
Arts & Sciences Book Chapters
  • Brad Weiss, College of William and Mary
Document Type
Book Chapter
Department/Program
Anthropology
Publication Date
8-28-2008
Book Title
Figuring the Future: Children, Youth, and Globalization
Publisher
School for Advanced Research Press
Editor
Jennifer Cole and Deborah Durham
Series
School for Advanced Research Advanced Seminar Series
Abstract

Child laborers in South Asia, child soldiers in Sierra Leone and Uganda, Chinese youth playing computer games to earn virtual gold, youth involved in sex trafficking in the former Soviet republics and Thailand: these are just some of the young people featured in the news of late. The idea that young people are more malleable and the truisms that "youth are the future" or "children are our hope for the future" give news stories and scholarly accounts added meaning. To address how and why youth and children have come to seem so important to globalization, the contributors to this book look at the both the spatial relations and the temporal dimensions of globalization in places as far apart as Oakland, California, and Tamatave, Madagascar, in situations as disparate as the idealization of childhood innocence and the brutal lives of street children. Discourses of, and practices by, youth and children, from the design of toys to political mobilization, are critical sites through which people everywhere conceive of, produce, contest, and naturalize the new futures.

ISBN
978-1934691052
Citation Information
Brad Weiss. "Chronic Mobb Asks a Blessing: Apocalyptic Hip-Hop in a Time of Crisis" (2008) p. 197 - 222
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/brad-weiss/25/