<font><font face="georgia,serif">Hip-hop Kichwa: Sounds of indigenous modernity<br><br>Kichwa hip-hop dethrones the imagery of indigenous peoples as living in rural communities isolated from modernity.<br><br>Last Modified: 18 Aug 2012 19:40<br>
<br>Quito, Ecuador - French people like hip-hop. So much so that socialist candidate Francois Hollande used Kanye West and Jay-Z's "Niggas in Paris" as the soundtrack to give some pizazz to one of his electoral campaign videos. It was probably a good shot at expressing ideas of change. Hip-hop is, after all, the global language of the youth. But it is also one of the languages of alternative politics, in the streets and against the state. Inevitably, then there is an un-bridgeable gap between Hollande's electoral use of rap for his campaign and Medine rapping the ineffectiveness of human rights for black men and women in France.<br>
<br>Hip-hop emerged as the voice of the excluded, and as mainstreamed and commercialised as it has become, its essence can hardly be appropriated by those who represent the official politics of the state. Hip-hop talks to power from the streets, claiming self-empowerment, denouncing racial injustice and seeking economic equality.<br>
<br>Access full article below:<br><a href="http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/08/201285142554706344.html">http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/08/201285142554706344.html</a><br></font></font>