The Hiplife in Ghana: West African Indigenization of Hip-Hop
by Halifu Osumare
Palgrave Macmillan (Sep 06, 2012)
Nonfiction, Hardcover, 231 pages
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Description of The Hiplife in Ghana: West African Indigenization of Hip-Hop by Halifu Osumare
The Hiplife in Ghana explores one international site - Ghana, West Africa - where hip-hop music and culture have morphed over two decades into the hiplife genre of world music. It investigates hiplife music not merely as an imitation and adaptation of hip-hop, but as a reinvention of Ghana’s century-old highlife popular music tradition.
Author Halifu Osumare traces the process by which local hiplife artists have evolved a five-phased indigenization process that has facilitated a youth-driven transformation of Ghanaian society. She also reveals how Ghana’s social shifts, facilitated by hiplife, have occurred within the country’s ’corporate recolonization,’ serving as another example of the neoliberal free market agenda as a new form of colonialism. Hiplife artists, we discover, are complicit with these global socio-economic forces even as they create counter-narratives that push aesthetic limits and challenge the neoliberal order.

Additional Book Information:
- ISBN: 9781137021649
- Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan
- Publisher: Macmillan Publishers
- Parent Company: Holtzbrinck Publishing Group
Books similiar to The Hiplife in Ghana: West African Indigenization of Hip-Hop may be found in the categories below:
- SOCIAL SCIENCE / Cultural & Ethnic Studies / African Studies
- Social Science / Popular Culture
- Social Science / Sociology / General