Coded in the Bars : Black Male Grief And Emotional Survival In 1995-2005 Hip-hop
(2025)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Scroll Wealth Press™, 2025
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781968446147 MWT18625241, 1968446141 18625241
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Coded in the Bars: Black Male Grief and Emotional Survival in 1995-2005 Hip-Hop is a groundbreaking work of cultural grief analysis that decodes how Black men used hip-hop as an emotional survival toolkit during an era of mass disenfranchisement. From Tupac to Tems, Scarface to Jay-Z, author Sungba Asanti Kofi reframes rap not as entertainment-but as testimony.This book argues that hip-hop became a "confession booth" for unpermitted mourning. Artists layered grief beneath rhythm, metaphor, and swagger, crafting what the author terms Scrollkeeper testimony: bars as emotional archives in a world that denied Black men the right to cry.Blending literary analysis, trauma theory, and cultural history, this book pairs iconic hip-hop verses with classical literature and psychological frameworks. Each chapter explores lyrical expressions of grief, masculinity, and resistance-then connects them to historical systems of emotional suppression.Includes: - Lyrical analysis of Nas, DMX, Jay-Z, Tupac, Boosie, Burna Boy, and more - Literary parallels ( Tupac & Antigone; Nas & Dante) - Scrollkeeper Grief Coding Model™ - Glossary of clinical & cultural grief terms - Teaching tools: 10-week university-ready syllabus and trauma-informed grading rubricThis is not just music criticism. It is emotional witness. Coded in the Bars is for scholars, therapists, educators, and cultural critics ready to recognize Black male grief not as pathology-but as pedagogy.A grief ledger in verse. A canon correction in rhythm. A literary survival manual from the underside of mourning

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits