Representing the Marginalized Other

The Swedish Hip-hop Group Advance Patrol

Authors

  • Susan Lindholm

Keywords:

Hip-hop, Representation, The Other, Advance Patrol, Sweden

Abstract

Hip-hop artists are often perceived as societal critics who speak for, or represent a marginalized other, while at the same time re-presenting or staging themselves as individual artists. This article sets out to provide a more detailed account of the representation of such a marginalized other in Swedish Hip-hop by tracing the ways in which representation – as both speaking for and staging – is connected to the marginalized other in the lyrics of the Malmö-based Hip-hop group Advance Patrol. In their lyrics, Advance Patrol not only stage themselves as artists who speak for a marginalized other and artists who distance themselves from such representations by creating an externalized other. Their lyrics also stage them as what will be called a transnational other in-between Chile and Sweden and thereby connect them with a migration history in-between Chile and Sweden. It argues that the representations in their lyrics between 2003 and 2006 shift – between criticizing the logic of 'we' against 'them' that creates the marginalized other, and an affirmation of such marginalization. These shifting representations thus represent it as a concept that can never be fully assimilated into a dominant hegemonic structure, a concept that resists appropriation into forms of solidarity that claim to know or speak its 'truth'.

Author Biography

Susan Lindholm

Susan Lindholm is a Ph.D. candidate in History at Malmö University, Sweden. Her research interests include constructions of self and other within and through historical and locational contexts. Her dissertation explores Hip-hop culture in-between Chile and Sweden. E-mail: susan.lindholm@mah.se

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Published

2014-12-01

How to Cite

Lindholm, S. (2014). Representing the Marginalized Other: The Swedish Hip-hop Group Advance Patrol. Svensk Tidskrift för Musikforskning Swedish Journal of Music Research, 96, 105–125. Retrieved from https://publicera.kb.se/stm-sjm/article/view/33679

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Articles