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Stoute, Steve, and Mim Eichler. Rivas. The Tanning of America: How hip-hop Created a culture That rewrote the Rules of the New Economy. new york, 2011. Print

Stoute, Steve. Tanning of America. N.d. Television

McLeod, Ken. (2009) “The Construction of

Masculinity in African American Music and Sports, American Music. 27:2. 204-226.

Phillips, Layli, et. al. (2005). “Oppositional Consciousness within an Oppositional Realm: The Case of Feminism and Womanism in Rap and Hip Hop, 1976-2004.” The Journal of African American History. 90:3.

Gladwell,M.Annalsof Style. N.p. Web

Watkins, S. Craig. Hip Hop Matters: Politics, Pop Culture, and the Struggle for the the Soul of a Movement. Boston: Beacon, 2005. Print.

Jackson, Chandra, and Craig Young. The Psychological Impact of Hip-hop Culture and Hip-hop Music on the Inter/intrapersonal Development of Identity among African-American Adolescent Males. N.p.: n.p., 2005. Print.

Knight, Shaldea A. Perceptions of African American Parents regarding the Influence of Rap Music and Hip-hop on Their Youth. N.p.: n.p., 2005. Print.

Time Magazine. "'Hip-Hop Is the Most Important Youth Culture on the Planet' Read More: 'Hip-Hop Is the Most Important Youth Culture on the Planet'" (n.d.): n. pag. Http://content.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,55624,00.html. 22 Sept. 2000. Web.

Michiko Kakutani, “Common Threads: Why Are Homeboys and Surbanites Wearing Each Other's Clothes?”The New York Times Magazine , February 16, 1997, 18.

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