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Race at the Interface: Rendering Blackness on WorldStarHipHop.com
Author(s) -
Lauren McLeod Cramer
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
film criticism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.109
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 2471-4364
pISSN - 0163-5069
DOI - 10.3998/fc.13761232.0040.205
Subject(s) - rendering (computer graphics) , art , computer graphics (images) , race (biology) , computer science , sociology , gender studies
WorldStarHipHop.com (WSHH) is an online video aggregating website that describes itself as “the premiere online hip hop destination” and a home for “urban media.” Yet, browsing through the site provides little clarity on what constitutes a hip-hop video or urban Internet space because of the disparate video content, the actual racial diversity of the performers, and the website’s generic design. As a result, WSHH’s taglines make a strange claim about the current state of the black musical tradition. Through close readings of the site, this article considers the architecture of this space of interracial exchange and identifies the interface as an example of Modernist architectural simplicity. I argue WSHH’s modular design is flexible enough to include non-black bodies, while remaining a black “urban” space. Thus, the site’s straightforward architecture paradoxically becomes the scaffolding of a much more complex, de-corporealized, and “shareable” blackness

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