The Fifth Corner: Hip Hop's New Geometry of Adolescent Religiousity
Abstract
This ethnography explores the ways in which hip hop culture functions as a
secular form of religiosity for adolescent males in the United States. The data is
based on the author’s experience as an instructor at a private high school where
she observed the behaviour here described. ‘The Fifth Corner’—a site created by
eight teenage boys for enacting hip hop principles—displayed elements of religious
life that historians of religion conventionally ascribe to religious behaviour.
It was a designated sacred space carved out of a secular realm that provided
what the secular environment did not: the opportunity for a community of
believers to congregate, to compose scripture, and to generate symbolic and
ritual activity that elicited a spiritual feeling which promoted an ethical posture
and led to the development of a doctrine of faith.
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