"'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation Critique

A challenge in teaching English composition is helping students envision plagiarism as “borrowing” – showing love to author(s) and/or text(s) that further their argument(s), versus “stealing” – biting someone’s style and words. Alastair Pennycook (1996) and Sarah Wakefield (2006) have contributed pi...

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Main Author: Todd Craig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2013-10-01
Series:Radical Teacher
Online Access:http://radicalteacher.library.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/radicalteacher/article/view/40
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spelling doaj-3f3cfc243b764669b7de07a844f5033f2020-11-24T22:52:10ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghRadical Teacher1941-08322013-10-01970202910.5195/rt.2013.4038"'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation CritiqueTodd Craig0Medgar Evers College (CUNY)A challenge in teaching English composition is helping students envision plagiarism as “borrowing” – showing love to author(s) and/or text(s) that further their argument(s), versus “stealing” – biting someone’s style and words. Alastair Pennycook (1996) and Sarah Wakefield (2006) have contributed pieces to the elaborate plagiarism/citation puzzle, while Houston Baker situated the hip-hop DJ in seminal text Black Studies, Rap and the Academy (1993). Merging these moments introduces critical questions: Did Diddy invent “the remix” or become the illest beat-biter ever? How did DJ/Producers Pete Rock and Large Professor pay homage to previous musical genres to further hip-hop remix production without just taking 4-8 bar samples, copying sources and claiming unethical ownership? And how can this discussion provide students a window into citation conversations? This article will remix these “texts” to introduce the idea of DJ Rhetoric to discuss plagiarism. Through the lens of the hip-hop DJ in writing classrooms, one can foster an appreciation of the difference between “love and theft” in student citation. This article will couple examples from hip-hop music/culture while simultaneously remixing interviews from various hip-hop DJ/producers to help answer these difficult questions.http://radicalteacher.library.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/radicalteacher/article/view/40
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Todd Craig
spellingShingle Todd Craig
"'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation Critique
Radical Teacher
author_facet Todd Craig
author_sort Todd Craig
title "'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation Critique
title_short "'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation Critique
title_full "'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation Critique
title_fullStr "'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation Critique
title_full_unstemmed "'Jackin’ for Beats'": DJing for Citation Critique
title_sort "'jackin’ for beats'": djing for citation critique
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Radical Teacher
issn 1941-0832
publishDate 2013-10-01
description A challenge in teaching English composition is helping students envision plagiarism as “borrowing” – showing love to author(s) and/or text(s) that further their argument(s), versus “stealing” – biting someone’s style and words. Alastair Pennycook (1996) and Sarah Wakefield (2006) have contributed pieces to the elaborate plagiarism/citation puzzle, while Houston Baker situated the hip-hop DJ in seminal text Black Studies, Rap and the Academy (1993). Merging these moments introduces critical questions: Did Diddy invent “the remix” or become the illest beat-biter ever? How did DJ/Producers Pete Rock and Large Professor pay homage to previous musical genres to further hip-hop remix production without just taking 4-8 bar samples, copying sources and claiming unethical ownership? And how can this discussion provide students a window into citation conversations? This article will remix these “texts” to introduce the idea of DJ Rhetoric to discuss plagiarism. Through the lens of the hip-hop DJ in writing classrooms, one can foster an appreciation of the difference between “love and theft” in student citation. This article will couple examples from hip-hop music/culture while simultaneously remixing interviews from various hip-hop DJ/producers to help answer these difficult questions.
url http://radicalteacher.library.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/radicalteacher/article/view/40
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