The Rise of Street Literature
• June 13, 2008 • Leave a CommentPosted in 'Persepolis', active anarchist, Almah LaVon Rice, America's Pop Culture, American Artists, American Surrealism, Analytical Consciousness, Apocryphal, art, Art&Design, Artisitc Milieu, Asia, Authenticity, bibliophile, Biographia Literaria, Black Friday, Blog, Blogging, Bohemia, Bohemian Ink, Book Seller Moguls, books, censorship, Coffee House Press, collectives, Colorlines, Comic Arts, contemporary art, Contemporary Writers, creative writing, critical media, Culture & Art, culture consumption, Da Ghetto, disparate collection of voices, dissemination of images, Dissemintion of popular culture, ethnic violence, fiction vs reality, Figurative Imagery, free-speech, freedom, Gangsta-Lit, Ghetto-Lit, Gia Bao Tran, Graphic Novels/Art, human rights, humanity, hyperrealistic, hypocrisy, ignored genres, Independent Media/Journalism, Independent press, Independent/Progressive publications, Intellectual Milieu, liberation, lit&bit, Media Moguls, modern urban Life, Novelist, Novella Parody, Oppressive Politics, Poignant Themes, popular culture, Prose Fiction, psychological aspects in Urban Writing/Lit, psychopathology, Race & Representation, Satiric Tales, Shakespeare, Shakespeare and Urban Lit/Writing/Life, Slangy, social criticism, social critique, social philosophy, Street-Lit, Urban Fiction, Urban Literature/Writing, urban living
Tags: Almah LaVon Rice, Colorlines, Comic Arts, Da Ghetto, Gangsta-Lit, Ghetto-Lit, Gia Bao Tran, Graphic Novels/Art, Media Moguls, Novella Parody, Race & Representation, Satiric Tales, Shakespeare and Urban Lit/Writing/Life, Street-Lit, Urban Fiction, Urban Literature, Urban-Lit
Recent Comments