HipHop und Postkolonialismus

This article analyzes the use of foreign languages in German hip hop from the perspective of postcolonial theories, replacing the tensions between colonizers and colonized with symbolic power struggles between “dominant” and “dominated”. More precisely, I try to show how the history of German hip ho...

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Main Author: David Chemeta
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Presses universitaires de Strasbourg 2018-12-01
Series:Recherches Germaniques
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/rg/476
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author David Chemeta
author_facet David Chemeta
author_sort David Chemeta
collection DOAJ
description This article analyzes the use of foreign languages in German hip hop from the perspective of postcolonial theories, replacing the tensions between colonizers and colonized with symbolic power struggles between “dominant” and “dominated”. More precisely, I try to show how the history of German hip hop has evolved from the exclusive use of the English language viewed as a “universal language”, to the use of the German language, and then “creolization” and a linguistic bricolage between German, Turkish, and other languages. By analyzing the linguistic evolutions of hip hop in Germany using concepts from Postcolonial Studies, I seek to highlight the way many rappers with migration backgrounds, as well as part of the people from migration backgrounds living in Germany, have deconstructed the classical idea of “germanity”, often in order to reshape it into a more hybrid form.
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spelling doaj.art-4674fcda169341409f2171bdc8c984422022-12-21T18:34:17ZdeuPresses universitaires de StrasbourgRecherches Germaniques0399-19892649-860X2018-12-014814115610.4000/rg.476HipHop und PostkolonialismusDavid ChemetaThis article analyzes the use of foreign languages in German hip hop from the perspective of postcolonial theories, replacing the tensions between colonizers and colonized with symbolic power struggles between “dominant” and “dominated”. More precisely, I try to show how the history of German hip hop has evolved from the exclusive use of the English language viewed as a “universal language”, to the use of the German language, and then “creolization” and a linguistic bricolage between German, Turkish, and other languages. By analyzing the linguistic evolutions of hip hop in Germany using concepts from Postcolonial Studies, I seek to highlight the way many rappers with migration backgrounds, as well as part of the people from migration backgrounds living in Germany, have deconstructed the classical idea of “germanity”, often in order to reshape it into a more hybrid form.http://journals.openedition.org/rg/476postcolonialismmigrationintegrationlanguageship hop
spellingShingle David Chemeta
HipHop und Postkolonialismus
Recherches Germaniques
postcolonialism
migration
integration
languages
hip hop
title HipHop und Postkolonialismus
title_full HipHop und Postkolonialismus
title_fullStr HipHop und Postkolonialismus
title_full_unstemmed HipHop und Postkolonialismus
title_short HipHop und Postkolonialismus
title_sort hiphop und postkolonialismus
topic postcolonialism
migration
integration
languages
hip hop
url http://journals.openedition.org/rg/476
work_keys_str_mv AT davidchemeta hiphopundpostkolonialismus