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University of California Press
Open Access

Values That Pay

Complicity, Sincerity, and Hip Hop in Contemporary Moroccan Life

by Kendra Salois (Author)
Price: $12.99 / £10.99
Publication Date: May 2025
Edition: 1st Edition
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 252
ISBN: 9780520976917
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Illustrations: 10 color illus.
Series:

About the Book

A free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press’s Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more.

Today, Morocco's hip hop artists are vital to their country's reputation as diverse, creative, and modern. But in the 1990s and 2000s, teenage amateurs shaped their craft and ideals together as the profound socioeconomic changes of neoliberalization swept through their neighborhoods. Values That Pay traces Moroccan hip hop's trajectory from sidewalk cyphers and bedroom studios to royal commendations and international festivals. Kendra Salois draws from more than ten years of research into her interlocutors' music and moral reasoning to explore the constitutive tensions of institutionalization, hip hop aesthetics, and neoliberal life. Entrepreneurial artists respond to their unavoidable complicity with an extractive state through aesthetic and interpersonal sincerity, educating their fans on the risks and responsibilities of contemporary citizenship. Salois argues that over the past forty years, Moroccan hip hop practitioners have transformed not only themselves but also what it means to be an ethical citizen in a deeply unequal nation.

About the Author

Kendra Salois studies the ways musicians make meaning from systems that do not serve them to gain insight into a more just future. She is Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology at American University in Washington, DC.

Reviews

"In recent decades, Morocco has emerged as a key player in the global music scene, not least in hip hop. Moving effortlessly between street-level ethnography of the rap scene and analysis of the political economy of transnational cultural flows, Kendra Salois offers a keenly observed, historically grounded, and eminently readable history of Moroccan hip hop."—Hisham Aidi, author of Rebel Music: Race, Empire, and the New Muslim Youth Culture

"Guided by her steady refusal to dismiss Moroccan hip hop artists and their fans as complicit with the state, as sell-outs to the market, or alternatively as resistant, Salois's caring world of neoliberal subject making is alive with improvisations, debate, ethics, human dilemmas, fortitude, music, and young people having fun."—Louise Meintjes, author of Dust of the Zulu: Ngoma Aesthetics after Apartheid