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Kevin Powell presents the keynote address at โ€œYa Heard Me? Meanings in Hip-Hop Cultureโ€ conference Aug. 14. Credit: Courtesy Buzz International Group

From Africa to America, everyone around the world has a story to tell, and more and more every day this story is being told through the medium of hip-hop.

This Friday and Saturday, Aug. 14 and 15, the international hip-hop conference โ€œYa Heard Me? Meanings in Hip-Hop Cultureโ€ will offer workshops and performances at Jackson State University. This is the first time the conference has been held in the United States; the two previous conferences have been held in Ghana.

Rhyme-N-Reason, a local organization that seeks to educate the global community about hip-hop, helped bring the conference to the city. The conference on Friday will include workshops with themes revolving around helping rappers market themselves, ways to break down pre-conceived notions about hip-hop, and analysis on hip-hop art from actual graffiti artists.

President of Rhyme-n-Reason and JSU graduate Carol Oโ€™Connor says that attendees can expect โ€œvery interesting and insightful presentations by hip-hop scholars and people who are well known in the global hip-hop community.โ€

โ€œtโ€™s important to honor the message of music and the talent that we have around us and give back to the community,โ€ Oโ€™Connor says.

All workshops are free, and attendees can attend a mini film festival later in the evening at 8:30 p.m. Films such as โ€œHip-Hop in Ghanaโ€ and other hip-hop films from filmmakers in the Jackson area will screen during the festival.

On Saturday, Jackson State President Ronald Mason Jr. will greet the attendees, followed by a keynote speech from Kevin Powell, a writer, public speaker, activist and hip-hop expert. Powell is also running for Congress in Brooklyn, N.Y.

There will be even more presentations where attendees can tell their own stories and learn about hip-hop in education. Finally, at the end of the night, attendees can pay $10 to experience a big rap concert at the Assembly Center where 20 rappers from Ghana, India and Jackson will perform on stage.

Oโ€™Connor says itโ€™s important to educate the community on what hip-hop really means. Borrowing a quote from Jackson native and rapper David Banner, she says, โ€œHip-hop is the way you live.โ€

For more information about โ€œYa Heard Me,โ€ contact Carol Oโ€™Connor at 928-961-0393 or visit http://www.rhymenreasonusa.org

Previous Comments

Interesting. I am anxious to see if there is any analysis concerning Hip-Hop and Minstrelsy in the depiction of black people.


Blackwatch- So was that analysis discussed?

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The Mississippi Free Press produced this story through the MFP Solutions Lab, supported by the Solutions Journalism Network. This series digs into Mississippiโ€™s systemic issues and sheds light on responses to them in other communities. Beyond just reporting on problems, these stories interrogate their causes and inspect potential solutions.