2020
DOI: 10.15845/voices.v20i1.2870
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Hip Hop as an Agent for Health and Wellbeing in Schools

Abstract: Abstr Abstract actHip Hop culture has shown an increasing presence in mainstream schooling over the last 15 years. This presence has taken many forms, including extracurricular programs, pedagogical tools, and whole-school approaches to student learning and development. Yet, discourse explicitly exploring the use of Hip Hop to facilitate wellbeing outcomes in schools remains limited. To explore the state of current research at this particular intersection, this paper presents a narrative synthesis of 22 resear… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 38 publications
(179 reference statements)
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“…Hip Hop culture, which includes music (DJing/beat making), verbal expressions (rapping), visual arts (graffiti), and dance (breakdancing) (Rose, 1993), is gaining increasing attention in the creative arts therapy space (Travis et al, 2020). The academic discourse around the potential of Hip Hop culture in school and therapeutic spaces more generally has grown exponentially in recent decades (Crooke et al, 2020). A growing body of literature outlines several ways that Hip Hop modalities successfully engage youth from various backgrounds in school settings, given its inextricable links with global youth culture (Petchauer, 2009).…”
Section: Hip Hop Therapy Programs For Youthmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Hip Hop culture, which includes music (DJing/beat making), verbal expressions (rapping), visual arts (graffiti), and dance (breakdancing) (Rose, 1993), is gaining increasing attention in the creative arts therapy space (Travis et al, 2020). The academic discourse around the potential of Hip Hop culture in school and therapeutic spaces more generally has grown exponentially in recent decades (Crooke et al, 2020). A growing body of literature outlines several ways that Hip Hop modalities successfully engage youth from various backgrounds in school settings, given its inextricable links with global youth culture (Petchauer, 2009).…”
Section: Hip Hop Therapy Programs For Youthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 1998 the term Hip Hop Therapy was introduced by Tyson (2002) as an innovative therapeutic tool for at-risk and delinquent youth. The author focused on rap music's poetic and therapeutic impact, and he and many other scholars included the other three elements of Hip Hop to the Hip Hop Therapy concept (Crooke et al, 2020;Tyson, 2002). Since then, a range of seminal texts have been published, outlining Hip Hop's potential to engage culturally diverse youth populations and afford opportunities for addressing issues such as grief and other significant mental health conditions (Travis et al, 2019).…”
Section: Hip Hop Therapy Programs For Youthmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The reason we choose anime, idol culture is that although they comprise large proportion of youth entertainment in Japan, they commonly relate to stigmas such as “Dasai” or “Otaku” (Dasai refers to an out-of-fashion, unattractive appearance; Otaku describes people who are homebodies) and induce school-related problems like non-attendance, or isolation ( Leshner et al., 2018 ). Hip-hop, however, is a newly-controversial topic, with some endorsing its rebellious spirit while others relate it to youth delinquency ( Crooke et al., 2020 ; Robinson et al., 2018 ; Ter Bogt et al., 2013 ). By contrast, sporty and fashionable characters are endorsed among youth ( Ishii, 2014 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%