By limiting yourself only to Okyeame Kwame's rap, you do a gross injustice to the whole song. I haven't heard the song but I know you must have done a narrow interpretation.
Your appeal at the end of your piece is also fa ... read full comment
By limiting yourself only to Okyeame Kwame's rap, you do a gross injustice to the whole song. I haven't heard the song but I know you must have done a narrow interpretation.
Your appeal at the end of your piece is also far-fetched since it is drawn only on a few seconds of the song.
Some of us would have wanted to see how the whole piece sits together as a unity (including the part you take out to concentrate on). The thing is, as you well know, hidden meanings/messages can be found in any piece of poetry. Someone else can find other hidden messages from the same rap session.
Let's hope you'll come up with an analysis of the whole.
Is the song rendered only in Twi?
Numo 7 years ago
You turn :free-style rap" into bookish "quatrains" and "stanzas"!
Tweeaaa, do you know how much wealth and worth is generated by unschooled rappers globally?
Enough of this academic crapshoot!
You turn :free-style rap" into bookish "quatrains" and "stanzas"!
Tweeaaa, do you know how much wealth and worth is generated by unschooled rappers globally?
Infantile write up
By limiting yourself only to Okyeame Kwame's rap, you do a gross injustice to the whole song. I haven't heard the song but I know you must have done a narrow interpretation.
Your appeal at the end of your piece is also fa ...
read full comment
You turn :free-style rap" into bookish "quatrains" and "stanzas"!
Tweeaaa, do you know how much wealth and worth is generated by unschooled rappers globally?
Enough of this academic crapshoot!