East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music

This thesis tells the story of the emergence of Grime music. Grime, as a music sub-culture has its origins in the Caribbean community of East London, at the turn of the twenty-first century and can be seen as a continuation of the lineage of Caribbean and Caribbean-British music genres that also tak...

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Main Author: Pickering, Joshua Osoro
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56506/
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author Pickering, Joshua Osoro
author_facet Pickering, Joshua Osoro
author_sort Pickering, Joshua Osoro
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis tells the story of the emergence of Grime music. Grime, as a music sub-culture has its origins in the Caribbean community of East London, at the turn of the twenty-first century and can be seen as a continuation of the lineage of Caribbean and Caribbean-British music genres that also takes in influences from other parts of the world. I will be describing the story of Grime from a particular angle: that which considers the racial prejudice, and cultural suppression faced by London’s black communities in the period before Grime’s emergence, as well as during it, and the effects of economic gentrification in the area. I will demonstrate that a combination of British racism and local gentrification were responsible for Grime being pushed out of its traditional communities. I will support this, despite a paucity of academic texts, by drawing on a vast wealth of online resources that followed Grime’s forced transition from the physical environment of East London to the digital world. I will also argue that this transition, though an unintentional effect of suppression, is the cause behind Grime’s rise to becoming a mainstream culture that now represents Britain’s wider working-class black and ethnic minority community while maintaining its street authenticity: its life-source and central ethos.
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spelling nottingham-565062025-02-28T14:29:02Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56506/ East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music Pickering, Joshua Osoro This thesis tells the story of the emergence of Grime music. Grime, as a music sub-culture has its origins in the Caribbean community of East London, at the turn of the twenty-first century and can be seen as a continuation of the lineage of Caribbean and Caribbean-British music genres that also takes in influences from other parts of the world. I will be describing the story of Grime from a particular angle: that which considers the racial prejudice, and cultural suppression faced by London’s black communities in the period before Grime’s emergence, as well as during it, and the effects of economic gentrification in the area. I will demonstrate that a combination of British racism and local gentrification were responsible for Grime being pushed out of its traditional communities. I will support this, despite a paucity of academic texts, by drawing on a vast wealth of online resources that followed Grime’s forced transition from the physical environment of East London to the digital world. I will also argue that this transition, though an unintentional effect of suppression, is the cause behind Grime’s rise to becoming a mainstream culture that now represents Britain’s wider working-class black and ethnic minority community while maintaining its street authenticity: its life-source and central ethos. 2019-07-22 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56506/1/Joshua%20Pickering%20MRes%20Thesis%20-%20Corrections.pdf Pickering, Joshua Osoro (2019) East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. Grime / race / place / community / black British
spellingShingle Grime / race / place / community / black British
Pickering, Joshua Osoro
East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music
title East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music
title_full East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music
title_fullStr East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music
title_full_unstemmed East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music
title_short East Ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of Grime music
title_sort east ends: race, place and community in the story of the emergence of grime music
topic Grime / race / place / community / black British
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56506/