2017
DOI: 10.25101/17.2
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A “Chance” of Success: The Influence of Subcultural Capital on the Commercial Success of Chance The Rapper

Abstract: This case study builds on Sarah Thornton's (1996) theory of subcultural capital as well as Bourdieu's theories of capital (1986) by providing a rich description of Chance the Rapper's path to success. Findings demonstrate that his accumulation of subcultural capital within both the Christian and hip-hop subcultures, as well as his use of economic, cultural, social, and symbolic capital to build a following, were necessary for his commercial success. Using information derived from interviews, textual analyses, … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In 2016, Chance the Rapper paired with Apple Music to exclusively release his album Coloring Book for two weeks and became the first "streaming only" album to chart on Billboard 200. While remaining unsigned, Chance has been alternatively sponsored by other large businesses such as Apple, Bud Light, and CitiBank to become commercially successful (Austen 2016;Best et al 2017;Phillips 2017). Other major corporations such as Live Nation (Live Nation 2013) and potentially Spotify (Resnikoff 2017) are attempting to create their own record labels to circumvent the control of the traditional three major labels.…”
Section: The Changing Nature Of Hip-hop's Indie Movementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2016, Chance the Rapper paired with Apple Music to exclusively release his album Coloring Book for two weeks and became the first "streaming only" album to chart on Billboard 200. While remaining unsigned, Chance has been alternatively sponsored by other large businesses such as Apple, Bud Light, and CitiBank to become commercially successful (Austen 2016;Best et al 2017;Phillips 2017). Other major corporations such as Live Nation (Live Nation 2013) and potentially Spotify (Resnikoff 2017) are attempting to create their own record labels to circumvent the control of the traditional three major labels.…”
Section: The Changing Nature Of Hip-hop's Indie Movementmentioning
confidence: 99%