The rhetoric of gangsta rap that arose from hip-hop and rage at racism and harsh law and order policies is made meaningful by the author. McCann explicates this subgenre's rhetoric, history during the 1980s and 1990s, deviations from traditions, and complexities of situations and attainments: words, ideas, fame, wealth, violence, death. In pointing out the lessons gangsta rap holds for both public policy making and rhetoric itself, McCann carefully presents evidence from the rappers, the NWA group to Tupac Shakur, the albums Straight Outta Compton and All Eyes on Me, the events, and global and inner-city issues. The power of rap rhetoric as to what it conveys and the actions it influences is made starkly clear. McCann observes that these black male voices up against white male police tactics invite a closer look. In a climate of abiding racism, sexism, and inequitable and excessive incarceration, as well as the continuing fall-out from the mark of criminality rhetoric and gangsta rap, this text is timely. Recommended."" - CHOICE
""The Mark of Criminality offers readers, especially ones not familiar with the conjuncture of gangsta rap and the militarization of policing tactics targeting black and brown bodies, a necessary history and some very intriguing cultural moments related to the era under scrutiny."" - Eric King Watts, author of Hearing the Hurt: Rhetoric, Aesthetics, and Politics of the New Negro Movement