
Renegades: Digital Dance Cultures From Dubsmash To Tiktok Interrogates The Roles That Dubsmash, Social Media, And Hip Hop Music And Dance Play In Youth Identity Formation In The United States. It Explores Why Generation Z-so-called Zoomers-use Social Media Dance Apps To Connect, How They Use Them To Build Relationships, How Race And Other Factors Of Identity Play Out Through These Apps, How Social Media Dance Shapes A Wider Cultural Context, And How Community Is Formed In The Same Way That It Might Be In A Club. These Zoomer Artists-namely D1 Nayah, Jalaiah Harmon, Tisakorean, Brooklyn Queen, Kayla Nicole Jones, And Dr. Boffone's High School Students-have Become Key Agents In Culture Creation And Dissemination In The Age Of Social Media Dance And Music. These Black Artists Are Some Of Today's Most Influential Content Creators, Even If They Lack Widespread Name Recognition. Their Artistic Contributions Have Come To Define A Generation. And Yet, Up Until This Point, The Majority Of Influential Dubsmashers Have Not Been Recognized For Their Influence On Us Popular Culture. This Book Tells Their Stories--
This book investigates how social media dance applications like Dubsmash and TikTok serve as critical sites for identity formation and cultural production among Generation Z. Trevor Boffone, a scholar of digital culture and performance, utilizes a combination of ethnographic observation and cultural analysis to examine the intersection of hip hop, race, and digital connectivity. He argues that young Black creators are the primary architects of contemporary viral trends, despite often lacking mainstream institutional recognition for their contributions to popular culture.
What You Will Find
Experts in digital media and youth culture recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of viral aesthetics and the labor of Black creators in digital spaces. Readers frequently note the accessibility of the prose, which balances academic rigor with a clear focus on the lived experiences of the featured artists.
Page Count:
167
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
ISBN-10:
0197577695
ISBN-13:
9780197577691
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