iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Jay-Z's Georgetown Class: Rapper And Mogul's Career, Lyrics The Focus Of Sociology Course

Jayz Georgetown

ERIC TUCKER   12/ 2/11 12:08 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Michael Eric Dyson parses Jay-Z's lyrics as if analyzing fine literature. The rapper's riffs on luxury cars and tailored clothes and boasts of being the "Mike Jordan of recording" may make for catchy rhymes, but to Dyson, they also reflect incisive social commentary.

Dyson, a professor, author, radio host and television personality, has offered at Georgetown University this semester a popular – if unusual – class dedicated to Jay-Z and his career. The course, "Sociology of Hip Hop: Jay-Z," may seem an unlikely offering at a Jesuit, majority-white school that counts former President Bill Clinton among its alumni. But Dyson insists that his class confronts topics present in any sociology course: racial and gender identity, sexuality, capitalism and economic inequality.

"It just happens to have an interesting object of engagement in Jay-Z – and what better way to meet people where they are?" Dyson said. "It's like Jesus talking to the woman at the well. You ask for a drink of water, then you get into some theological discussions."

Classes centered on pop culture superstars like Bruce Springsteen have sprouted on college campuses in recent years; Dyson himself says he's previously taught classes on Tupac Shakur and Marvin Gaye at the University of Pennsylvania. He says Jay-Z, whose real name is Shawn Carter, is a worthy subject because of his diversity of business interests – a clothing entrepreneur, he's also a part owner of the NBA's New Jersey Nets (soon to move to his native New York borough of Brooklyn) – as well as his immense cross-cultural appeal and "lyrical prowess" in articulating contemporary black culture and his place in it.

"I think he's an icon of American excellence," Dyson said.

Though hardly as rigorous as organic chemistry, the course does have midterm and final examinations and required readings, including from Jay-Z's book, "Decoded." The 75-minute classes – the final one is Wednesday – focus more on African-American culture and business than on the particulars of the rapper's biography, which include millions in record sales, Grammy Awards, a marriage to Beyonce with a baby on the way and tours with Kanye West and Eminem.

One recent lecture centered on how popular black artists reflect their culture and race to the public at large, with Dyson name-dropping LL Cool J, Diahann Carroll and Bill Cosby. The professor and one student went back and forth on whether the rapper's lyrical depictions of his extravagant lifestyle – "Used to rock a throwback, balling on the corner/Now I rock a Teller suit, looking like an owner" is one of many examples – amounted to bragging and rubbing his taste for fine living in the faces of his listeners.

The student took the position that Jay-Z appears overly boastful, but Dyson countered that the rapper, who grew up in a Brooklyn housing project but has since become a multimillionaire, has never lost his ability to relate to the struggles of everyday people and has continued giving voice to their concerns. Though Jay-Z raps about Saint-Tropez and expensive cigars, he also talks about being nurtured by Brooklyn. And in one song, "99 Problems," he attacks racial profiling with a stark depiction of a racially motivated traffic stop: "Son, do you know why I'm stopping you for?" the officer asks. Jay-Z replies: "`Cause I'm young and I'm black and my hat's real low."

The chairman of Georgetown's sociology department, Timothy Wickham-Crowley, says he supports Dyson's course for trying to show how Jay-Z's music fits into American society, and Steve Stoute, an author and marketing executive who has done business with Jay-Z and has spoken to the class, said the course has practical value for students interested in business.

But others have concerns.

Kevin Powell, who writes about hip-hop and has run unsuccessfully for Congress in Brooklyn, said any discussion of Jay-Z should account for what Powell says are the rapper's derogatory lyrics toward women and his expressions of excessive materialism. Kris Marsh, an assistant sociology professor at the University of Maryland who specializes in the black middle class, said that while she appreciated Jay-Z's cultural significance, she was wary of structuring an entire course around him and using his narrative alone to reflect black America. Though hip-hop artists can focus a lens on urban life, she said, "sometimes these artists use poetic license" and blend fact and fiction to an audience that is often suburban and white.

"We're not sure if it's fiction or real life. It can be almost indistinguishable sometimes in hip-hop," she said.

In an opinion piece published in the student newspaper, The Hoya, junior Stephen Wu dismissed as "poppycock" Dyson's belief that Jay-Z could be compared to Homer or Shakespeare.

"It speaks volumes that we engage in the beat of Carter's pseudo-music while we scrounge to find serious academic offerings on Beethoven and Liszt. We dissect the lyrics of "Big Pimpin'," but we don't read Spenser or Sophocles closely," Wu wrote.

Danielle Bailey, a senior international business and marketing major who is taking the class, said she was a Jay-Z fan before enrolling but now has greater appreciation for his business acumen.

"I know a lot of people are upset, but I think the point of college is to think outside the box. I rarely have classes that allow me to look at things differently," she said, adding, "It's not always about Mozart and Homer."

Dyson makes no apologies, saying the course is a conduit for studying the "major themes of American life" and that hip-hop artists at their best deserve to be classified alongside literary luminaries.

Jay-Z was on tour and not available for an interview, his representative said. But Dyson, who considers himself a friend of the rapper, says Jay-Z has told him he appreciates the course. And Bailey said she heard Jay-Z give a "shout-out" to the class at a recent concert of his she attended.

"You're doing the class there," Dyson says Jay-Z told him. "I'm doing kind of the master class while I'm in concert."

___

Online:

http://www.georgetown.edu/

Links:


____

Eric Tucker can be reached at http://twitter.com/etuckerAP

Check out Jigga and the other notables named to GQ's Men Of The Year list
FOLLOW HUFFPOST BLACK VOICES

WASHINGTON — Michael Eric Dyson parses Jay-Z's lyrics as if analyzing fine literature. The rapper's riffs on luxury cars and tailored clothes and boasts of being the "Mike Jordan of recording" m...
WASHINGTON — Michael Eric Dyson parses Jay-Z's lyrics as if analyzing fine literature. The rapper's riffs on luxury cars and tailored clothes and boasts of being the "Mike Jordan of recording" m...
Filed by Gene Demby  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 136
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
09:12 AM on 01/29/2012
"I think he's an icon of American excellence," Dyson said.

he can't be serious.
10:08 AM on 12/06/2011
Look at the track record of Michael Eric Dyson's books and topic discussions, and you will see that this guy is merely an OPPORTUNIST.(This GUY even embraces the "N" word Ni**a/Ni**er) I first saw this talk about "N" word using Jay-Z the rapper being a topic of class room discussion, and thought bullshit. When I saw that this Dyson is the one pushing it, I said "it figures". America, the portion that attacks Black people on all fronts, embraces people like Jay-Z and this Dyson guy, because THEY are DETRIMENTAL to the WELL BEING and BETTERMENT of Black people.
09:28 PM on 12/05/2011
It is a sad state of affairs when the likes of Jay-Z are studied for academic purposes....I mean really? Those supporting this are clearly starstruck by Jay's fame and forture... There is no deep philosophical message in Jay Z's lyrics... thats whats wrong with America today: we reward form over substance. I can respect Jay Z for his entreprenuerial endeavors, but thats where the respect stops. He made his fortune selling out his own people. Whats worse is that we have grown black men defending Jay Z as if he's this profound philospher. Jay Z is nothing that we should aspire to, he's one of the few lucky ones who survived the drug game. His lyrics are despicable and any self-respecting black person would not celebrate this crap. Micheal Eric Dyson is a classic educated fool who thinks he's a hip-hop star. I was done with him when he came after Bill Cosby and I reject everything Jay -Z stands for....and I'm a 30 year old black MAN.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bnww
#NoRecklessExcessiveNeedlessNWordUse
01:55 PM on 12/06/2011
Excellent summary, "truthundisputed."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Game Changer 88
Too True to Testify
07:43 PM on 12/04/2011
I wonder if they are going to Study the Lyrics about him flooding our streets with drugs to make money with the F.E.D's failing to stop him, while comparing himself to "satan".
05:48 PM on 12/04/2011
Jay-z is a "puppet," and is to blind to "see it."

(SMH)
03:32 PM on 12/04/2011
Black brothers, learn to read, write, and speak in a way that will advance you. Learn a technical skill or two, learn a skill that you can market for pay. Give only a little time to hearing music and gossip, and do not bother to study or meditate on music and gossip. When you graduate from college, nobody is going to pay you to talk about rap lyrics. When you are in the work force, no problem is going to be solved by rap lyrics. If you turn 30 and are illiterate and unskilled, you have wasted the first half of your life and the second half is likely doomed. Stay home, stay sober, and open a book that will elevate you.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Greg285
08:42 PM on 12/03/2011
Now I read an seen everything! Jay-Z being discussed in a college course? Society is definitely failing our youth as he talks about the same subject in all his albums..enough already
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
06:28 PM on 12/03/2011
"I had to hustle, my back to the wall, ashy knuckles
Pockets filled with a lot of lint, not a cent
Gotta vent, lot of innocent lives lost on the project bench
Whatchyou hollerin? Gotta pay rent, bring dollars in
By the bodega, iron under my coat, feeling braver
Doo-rag wrapping my waves up, pockets full of hope
Do not step to me - I'm awkward, I box lefty
An orphan my pops left me, And often, my momma wasn't home
Could not stress to me I wasn't grown,especially on nights
I brought something home to quiet the stomach rumblings
My demeanor - 30 years my senior
My childhood didn't mean much, only raising green up
Raising my fingers to critics, raising my head to the sky
B.I.G. I did it! Multi before I die
No lie, just know I chose my own fate
I drove by the fork in the road and went straight"
photo
Kriol Kidd
Laissez les bons temps rouler les gens
02:49 PM on 12/03/2011
In our over commercialized world, the artist who make the most money are usually the ones who deserve it the least.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
06:21 PM on 12/03/2011
Perhaps in some general sense.. But financial success does not mean someone's art isnt valid. Just as financial failure does not legitimize art.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
roguescr1be
beLIEve
09:45 AM on 12/03/2011
Always hate for the successful black man who took the lemons the world threw at him and turn it into lemonade that the entire world enjoys.

Good job, free thinking liberals. As a black man I can always count on your disgusting hypocrisy when it comes to minorities.

Thanks.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bnww
#NoRecklessExcessiveNeedlessNWordUse
12:38 PM on 12/03/2011
We have to expect more than promoting the n-word and misogyny!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
roguescr1be
beLIEve
02:01 AM on 12/04/2011
You clearly do not actually listen to anything he does, right? Are you even aware of the socio-political context through which those lyrics originate?

Its way bigger than "Big Pimpin'". Really, go look him up. He is not what you think.

If that is what you think, then hip hop in general is not what you think it is either.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:17 AM on 12/03/2011
I care about this guy just as much as he cares about me.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
06:32 PM on 12/03/2011
Clearly you care about him more, since you took the time to post on an article about him.

Tell me, is your opinion of hm based on an educated view of his lyrics?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bnww
#NoRecklessExcessiveNeedlessNWordUse
10:27 AM on 12/04/2011
You don't have to "care" about someone or a topic to read about it!?!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
honky1234
Sweep the leg? But I'll be disqualified!
04:44 AM on 12/03/2011
"My president is black but his house is all white"
03:27 AM on 12/03/2011
I'm sick of hearing about him and his non-pregnant wife.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bnww
#NoRecklessExcessiveNeedlessNWordUse
12:41 PM on 12/03/2011
Lol!! It's definitely very suspect...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
06:33 PM on 12/03/2011
please substantiate your insane theory.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
06:23 PM on 12/03/2011
I'm tired of your insane conspiracy theories.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bnww
#NoRecklessExcessiveNeedlessNWordUse
08:05 AM on 12/05/2011
Look up the meaning of "conspiracy theory." Lol...
02:55 AM on 12/03/2011
Would love to take that course. Starting with The Blueprint, Jay-Z has consistently been one step ahead of the rest of hip-hop. Jay's said it himself, he could be a Mos Def/Common type lyricist, but he prefers to succeed and give back (see: Moment of Clarity). Any body who says his lyrics are meaning less should listen to Heart of the City, Renegade, 99 Problems, On To The Next One, No Church in the Wild and New Day
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
martha high
03:58 AM on 12/03/2011
pride comes before a fall
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bnww
#NoRecklessExcessiveNeedlessNWordUse
12:40 PM on 12/03/2011
Yeah, and how many times does he use the n-word? Come on already!!

http://Educate-Empower.com
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
01:11 PM on 12/04/2011
I fail to see how a curse word negates an entire body of work. You do know that Shakespeare cursed, too, right?
02:43 AM on 12/03/2011
Jay Z is the fugliest no talent, luckiest man in the world.
02:02 PM on 12/03/2011
he is ugly but to say no talent is foolishness.
05:52 PM on 12/04/2011
What some people label as talent, others may label as "trash." People are different, think differently....when will we all begin to act like humans and respect "differences?"

(SMDH)
02:06 PM on 12/04/2011
Agreed! 110% swagger jacker like his howling banshee RuPaul's Little sister "wife", lol!