- UD officially acquires Chrysler property in Newark
- Klemas wins Lithuanian science award
- Newspaper cites Newark among six college towns worth visiting
- Newark Police make arrest in Nov. 18 robbery
- International festival celebrates culture, education at UD
- University assists with Delaware GIS Day field trip
- Piepalooza shows McNair spirit of community giving
- Fashion and Apparel Studies chair honored by Apparel Magazine
- 'Shakespeare First' attracts overflow crowd
- UD professor, alumnus help lead Vanderbilt death penalty debate program
- United Way campaign concludes with contributions topping $196,000
- UD launches Center for Political Communication
- Education professor inducted into Laureate Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi
- UD awarded funds for cyberinfrastructure development
- UD figure skaters excel at Eastern Sectionals
- Princeton anthropologist addresses human language and art in Darwin lecture
- Violinist Xiang Gao to lead China tour in June
- Delaware art history grad student honored for best paper
- MSERC programs in math education receive continued funding
- UD Library Associates elects officers for 2010
- Richards to return to faculty in College of Health Sciences
- UD Police seek information about injured student
- For the Record, Nov. 20, 2009
- UD in the News, Nov. 20, 2009
- UD planning teachers institute in cooperation with Yale National Initiative
- PCS, Academy of Lifelong Learning receive award
- Record 334 students receive General Honors Awards
- Vaughan elected interim president of national education organization
- Lambda Chi Alpha completes annual food drive
- Second Life Outsider art show seen a success
- Dec. 2: Former RNC chairperson Ed Gillespie to speak
- UD students tour CIA headquarters
- UD's second hydrogen fuel cell bus carries special guests
- Junior Chefs Rockfish Cook-Off accepting entries
- More News >>
- Dec. 2: Former RNC chairperson Ed Gillespie to speak
- Nov. 30-Dec. 4: College School schedules book fair
- Dec. 1: LGBT community to mark World AIDS Day
- Dec. 3: Center plans Pre-Kwanzaa Celebration
- Dec. 4: College of Education and Public Policy hosts graduate information sessions
- Dec. 4: Reindeer Run to benefit Special Olympics Delaware
- Dec. 6: New Castle County Alumni Club plans Winterthur holiday event
- Dec. 6: UD alumni events planned in Baltimore, Philadelphia
- Dec. 6: 'Jams for Jimmy' benefit concert to be held in Wilmington
- Dec. 7: Black Student Union to present program on racial stereotypes
- Dec. 12: Blue Hens men's basketball team plans toy drive
- May 7: Phi Kappa Phi plans ceremony
- Oct. 11-Nov. 29: International Film Series offered Sundays at Trabant
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Assessing Obama' series to feature faculty, national speakers
- Sept. 9-Dec. 2: 'Research on Women' fall lecture series announced
- Sept. 18-Dec. 18: Library's 'Lion Awakes' exhibition looks at reggae, Marley
- Sept. 26-May 1: Take in an opera at the Met with UD matinee tickets
- More What's Happening >>
- UD calendar >>
- Jan. 6, 28: Employee Nights at UD basketball games set
- Changes ahead for recognition of student honors
- Bicyclists, motorists need to watch out for one another
- Nominations sought for Redding Award recognizing campus diversity efforts
- Nov. 30: Chemical hygiene, lab safety survey deadline
- Princeton Review announces student survey
- UD's Winter Faculty Institute kicks off Jan. 5
- State offers UD faculty, staff free health risk assessment
- Upgrade to Windows 7 available for UD students
- More Campus FYI >>
4:04 p.m., Oct. 16, 2009----Whether it was talking about Newtonian physics, how Napoleon was the first great graffiti artist or President Ronald Regan's skills as a DJ, emcee and producer KRS-One left no stone unturned as he addressed a packed house at Mitchell Hall about the “Fundamentals of Hip-Hop” on Wednesday night.
Before delving into the specifics of his lecture, KRS-One, the stage name of Lawrence Krishna Parker, proclaimed that “this is a historical night, and here's why: What we are discussing, the fundamentals of hip-hop, is not really discussed in the university environment, the collegiate environment, the academic environment.”
KRS-One conceded that there are hundreds of colleges that teach hip-hop courses, but that they tend to get it wrong -- not wrong as in inaccurate, but wrong in the sense of “immature to mature.”
The main way that these courses, and many history of hip-hop books get it wrong, according to KRS-One, is that they try to document hip-hop from a historical, physical perspective when hip-hop is not a physical thing.
Rather, he said, hip-hop is a metaphysical principle, “an energy, a consciousness, it is an awareness, it is a behavior, it is an attitude, that's what hip-hop is. The attitude, the behavior, the collective consciousness produces rap, break dancing, graffiti art, DJ-ing and everything else that comes out of the culture.”
KRS-One went on to proclaim that because hip-hop is not a physical thing, “you cannot document it according to traditional historical methodology,” the main reason for this being that “when history is looked at physically, I'm trapped in my color, my ethnicity, my race. But when history is looked at as first causes, origins, not history yet, when you look at the origin of something, you step out of physical time and space, and you adopt ideas, not physical matter.”
This led into what KRS-One stressed as one of the original and most important effects of hip-hop -- it changed the perception of its people. When two friends are poor and are standing on the corner acknowledging that they are poor, they are always going to be poor. But, as KRS-One explained, when two poor people are standing on the corner and one of them starts rapping and proclaiming that he is the greatest rapper alive, and both he and his friend start to really believe it, then they actually become it.
“When you step into that personality, that personality has powers that come with it. Your psychology, your perception creates the environment you see. If you say 'I am Mark and Mark's reality is what Mark's reality is,' then that's what you'll stay in. If you say, 'I am the M-Ark' then M-Ark has its own reality. If you call yourself something, you will change your perception of the environment you are in.”
KRS-One then discussed how it is important in hip-hop to compliment a friend, to be positive about his rhyming skills and to “big him up” as the greatest rapper alive in order to change the perception of him and get him noticed. “Russell Simmons did it with LL Cool J, Puffy did it with Biggie, Eminem did it with Fifty, Dre did it with Eminem,” he said. “If you keep complimenting your friends, you get rich.”
KRS-One also explained how hip-hop gave value to a lot of things seen as worthless simply by changing the perception of those items, be they the rappers themselves or physical products like Timberland boots or bandanas.
“Back in the Eighties, you could get Timberland's for like $30. This is a construction boot, the Timberland boot. Hip-hoppers took it, used the perceptual ability of hip-hop, and said 'I like that shoe' and this ain't worth $30, it's worth $150. This is what hip-hop is about. They give you lemons, you make lemonade.”
The event was sponsored by the University of Delaware's Cultural Programming Advisory Board.
Article by Adam Thomas
Photos by Evan Krape




