Freitag, 19. Juli 2024

Global HipHop Studies Journal - Special Issue "Breaking and the Olympics"

 




I am thrilled to announce that the article "Breaking in Morocco: Opportunities and challenges for professionalization and gender equality in the run-up to the 2024 Olympic Games" by Friederike Frost & Jaspal N. Singh (2023) is now published in the Global HipHop Studies Journal and available as open access! 
 
Edited by Mary Fogarty and Jason Ng, the Global HipHop Studies Journal Special Issues “Breaking and the Olympics” (GHHS 4.1-4.2) explore contemporary debates about breaking in the Olympics, developments in local breaking scenes, historic reference points and develop critical discourses that can offer insight to practitioners, cultural organizations and institutions. In these double issues, members of the global community of breaking scholars and practitioners have come together to present research and artist statements that engage local, regional and national perspectives.

Issue 4.1 and 4.2 are available as open access: https://intellectdiscover.com/content/journals/ghhs/4/2 

 

Friederike Frost & Jaspal N. Singh (2023): 
 
Abstract:

In Morocco, breaking’s formalization through governmental bodies already took off years ago and federations have played a crucial role in the organization, implementation and control of competitions. Formal institutions have shaped the local scenes and provided opportunities but also posed challenges for breakers on the ground. In this article, we explore formalization, gender inequalities and pathways for professionalization in Morocco in the run-up to the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris. Utilizing ethnographic vignettes, interviews and survey data, we investigate how dancers navigate the top-down institutionalization of breaking and we give voice to their criticisms. We discuss how the formalization of breaking affects the Moroccan breaking scene, what critical opinions about this formalization exist and how formalization can be organized in culturally sustaining ways. In our investigation we paid particular attention to opportunities for professionalization and achieving gender equality for dancers from the Global South as well as the question of access to the western structure of the Olympics. We found that institutional formalization is perceived as disappointing and detrimental to the long-term and bottom-up development and self-organization, while nevertheless also opening up support and new opportunities for professionalization and achieving equality for b-girls.