The 1963 Hip-Hop Machine: Hip-Hop Pedagogy as Composition

Abstract

I begin with an analogy: teaching research-based argumentation and critique in composition studies is like learning how to perform hip-hop music. My analogy's focus on argumentation does not exclude traditional methods of argumentative pedagogy based on models like Stephen Toulmin's complex hierarchies or the Aristotelian triad of deliberative (offering advice), forensic (taking a side in a debate, often a legal or controversial matter), and epideictic (a speech of praise or blame appealing to an already won-over audience) discourse. Instead, I pose the analogy as a first step towards developing alternative or additional ways to engage composition students with the argumentative essay. In choosing hip-hop as a model for the composition essay, I attempt to draw upon a dominant form of contemporary culture familiar to the majority of students I encounter in my classrooms. Does a relationship between hip-hop and com-

Journal
College Composition and Communication
Published
2003-02-01
DOI
10.2307/3594173
Open Access
Closed

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (3)

  1. Technical Communication Quarterly
  2. Computers and Composition
  3. Computers and Composition

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