Adam Bradley (1) (1974–)
Author of Book of Rhymes: The Poetics of Hip Hop
For other authors named Adam Bradley, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Adam Bradley is a professor of English at the University of Colorado Boulder where he directs the Laboratory of Race and Popular Culture. The author or editor of six books, Bradley has contributed to the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, among others. He lives in Boulder, show more Colorado. show less
Image credit: from author's webpage
Works by Adam Bradley
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1974
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Lewis and Clark College (BA)
Harvard University (PhD) - Occupations
- English professor, University of California, Los Angeles
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
- Places of residence
- Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
- Map Location
- USA
Members
Reviews
English professors Bradley and DuBois make history in this rock-solid collection of hundreds of thoughtfully selected lyrics of recorded rap music produced between the late 1970s and now. For fans, this is an obvious treasure. For skeptical listeners and readers, this mega-anthology strips away rap’s performance elements and allows the language itself to pulse, break, spin, and strut in poems of audacity, outrage, insight, sweetness, and nastiness. Here is meter and rhyme, distillation, show more metaphor, misdirection, leaps of imagination, appropriation, improvisation, and a “vivid vocabulary” that can be explicit, offensive, funny, dumb, and transcendent. In their thorough and energetic introduction, Bradley and DuBois offer a concise history of rap and a keen discussion of its aesthetics, with an emphasis on written lyrics. Proceeding chronologically, from “The Old School,” 1978–84, to “The Golden Age,” 1985–92; “Rap Goes Mainstream,” 1993–99; and “New Millennium Rap,” they analyze each movement and profile each artist or group, from Kurtis Blow to Grandmaster Flash, Sugarhill Gang, LL Cool J, Public Enemy, NWA, Queen Latifah, Common, Lil’ Kim, Outkast, 2Pac, the Wu-Tang Clan, Eve, and legions more. Electrifying. --Donna Seaman show less
Sections of this book were assigned in one of my college classes years ago, but I wanted to read the whole thing, despite not being a rap listener. I found the concepts very interesting and well explained. This book would be good for an upper level high school English class, especially for kids who love listening to rap.
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Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 356
- Popularity
- #67,309
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 21









