KITWANA, Bakari. The Hip Hop generation; young blacks and the
crisis in African-American culture. Perseus. 230p. index. c2002.
0-465-02979-5. $14.00.
SA
Bakari Kitwana. executive editor of The Source: The Magazine of
Hip-Hop Music, Culture, and Politics and author of The Rap
on Gangsta
Rap, offers an in-depth look at the politics and history of the issues
affecting the hip hop generation. here defined as black youth born in
the years 1965 to 1984. Reading like a long, riveting magazine article,
The Hip Hop Generation spells our how this age group has become the
locus of all things media with pervasive influences on clothes, film,
music, and all forms of advertising. Kitwana's strength comes from
not only demonstrating the historic and political context of problems
facing the hip hop generation, but also showing how the lack of
understanding from black leadership (like the Civil Rights-era leaders
heading the NAACP and the Urban League) has led to the absence of
activism in modern youth. The author names what he considers the true
issues of this generation and then goes on to offer examples of
successful political figures and movements that have managed to rea ch
through hip hop apathy The only weakness of this work is its lack of
footnotes or a bibliography, which would have been helpful as a primer
to reading the many works cited in the text. An essential addition for
senior high and public libraries. Courtney Lewis, Libn., Groton Sch.,
Groton, MA