CHF 183.60

Vibe
The Sound and Feeling of Black Life in the American South

English · Hardback

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Description

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Where exactly does the South begin and end? Current maps are too rigid to account for the ways Black people have built the South while being simultaneously excluded from it. Drawing from the different ways Black artists in the 2-5-2 area code in North Carolina use "vibe" as a mode of knowing and communication, author Corey J. Miles illustrates how Black feeling and unfeeling offer entry points into the contemporary South that challenge static and monolithic notions of the region. Placing the local artists in conversation with other southern cultural creators such as 2 Chainz, Rod Wave, and Rapsody, these ethnographic narratives demonstrate that there are multiple Souths, with overlapping and distinct commitments to working through pain, sound, and belonging. In Vibe: The Sound and Feeling of Black Life in the American South, Miles narrates how southern Black sound, feeling, and being is constantly policed, surveilled, and criminalized. In doing so, he re-narrates the region as the "carceral South," to capture the ways people in the South and beyond can feel the emotional weight of the criminalization of Blackness. Pain music, a subgenre of trap music, is used to take the listener to moments of violence to allow them to hear the desires, anger, and silences that bind Black life in community. Through conceptions of ratchet, hood, and ghetto, Black artists turn away from respectable images and unmap the South. In trap music, they move the South to a space where multiple modes of being find respect and care.


About the author










Corey J. Miles is assistant professor of sociology and Africana studies at Tulane University. His work has been published in the Journal of Hip-Hop Studies, Cultural Studies, and the Howard Journal of Communication.


Summary

Drawing from the different ways Black artists in the 2-5-2 area code in North Carolina use ‘vibe’ as a mode of knowing and communication, author Corey Miles illustrates how Black feeling and unfeeling offer entry points into the contemporary South that challenge static and monolithic notions of the region.

Product details

Authors Corey J. Miles, Corey J Miles
Publisher University press of mississipp
 
Content Book
Product form Hardback
Publication date 15.12.2023
Subject Humanities, art, music > History > Regional and national histories
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories
 
EAN 9781496847287
ISBN 978-1-4968-4728-7
Pages 160
 
Series Margaret Walker Alexander Series in African American Studies
 

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