
Being Dope
Hip Hop and Theory through Mixtape Memoir
A.D. Carson(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Will be published approx. on 3. January 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
432 pages
978-0-19-777266-9 (ISBN)
Description
Being Dope is a book that will challenge what you think you know about rap and rappers. It is not a typical memoir and is as much about genre as it is about anything else: history, hip hop scholarship, storytelling, and theorizing through rap. Each section features A.D. Carson's mixtap/e/ssay lyrics alongside poetry, reflective prose, and critical analysis that provide social, historical, academic, and personal context. Being Dope is about permission and sanctioning. As Carson demonstrates, dope is distinct from drugs like illegal is distinct from legal and illicit is distinct from licit. Being Dope is about the rapper as genre, a contested category of human relegated to subhuman status in the public imagination. The book is, therefore, a refusal of this refusal: the rapper being, on his own terms.
Dope is rooted in the experiences of Black people in the U.S., including histories of people treated as property, chattel, technology, and the "War on Drugs" - a war on people - its casualties and aftermaths. Dope is also a measure of quality, of cool. Being Dope is about the presence of pasts and futures - methods of intoxication - more than it is about the absence of humility. Being Dope is the beautiful, ugly, abundant, and otherwise art made from the ruins of war and the carnage it leaves.
Dope is rooted in the experiences of Black people in the U.S., including histories of people treated as property, chattel, technology, and the "War on Drugs" - a war on people - its casualties and aftermaths. Dope is also a measure of quality, of cool. Being Dope is about the presence of pasts and futures - methods of intoxication - more than it is about the absence of humility. Being Dope is the beautiful, ugly, abundant, and otherwise art made from the ruins of war and the carnage it leaves.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Illustrations
15
Dimensions
Height: 226 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
612 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-777266-9 (9780197772669)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Book
approx. 12/2025
Oxford University Press Inc
€126.50
Not yet published
Person
A.D. Carson is from Decatur, Illinois. His i used to love to dream (2020) was the first-ever rap album peer-reviewed for publication with an academic press. It received the 2021 Research Award for Excellence in the Arts and Humanities from the University of Virginia, was a Category Winner (Best eProduct) of a Prose Award from the Association of American Publishers in 2021, and a Finalist for the American Council of Learned Societies Open Access Book Prize and Arcadia Open Access Publishing Award. Carson's dissertation album, Owning My Masters, received the Clemson Graduate Government's Outstanding Dissertation Award in 2017, and was published in 2024.
Author
Associate Professor of Hip HopAssociate Professor of Hip Hop, University of Virginia
Content
TBC