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Rap Testimony

UK Christian rap music and narrative identity

Rap Testimony

UK Christian rap music and narrative identity

Pre-order now for delivery after 30/10/2026.

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Paperback / softback

£60.00

Publisher: SCM Press
ISBN: 9780334067351
Number of Pages: 208
Published: 30/10/2026
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm
In Rap Testimony, James F. Broad examines the musical testimony narratives of UK Christian rappers to analyse how testimony is used in the Pentecostal movement in establishing identity both for individuals and the wider religious community. Distinct UK rap cultures such as grime and UK drill are flourishing in the UK and affecting popular culture and by extension, the church and youth culture. This book would begin conversations around rap and faith in a UK context. It aims to fill an unmet need in focusing on UK Christian rap expression and contribute to the academic study of Pentecostalism in the UK, hip-hop and the arts and more generally churches and youth groups as rap becomes an ever more popular medium for the expression of religious identity. Adapted from Broad’s PhD thesis, the data in the book is unique; both with regards to the songs, which no other academic work has examined before, and the interview data, which was generated for the study. Despite a wide range of material on religious rap in a US context, no such academic work exists in the UK in a book format. The book is interdisciplinary, focusing not only on the spirituality of the Pentecostal church in the UK but also utilising social science methods and musicological approaches in analysis. This work engages with debate about the extent to which, as Pentecostalism has institutionalised and denominationalised, the narrativity and orality of the early movement has been reduced in favour of more structured, clearly-defined theological statements. It argues that narrative and oral expressions are still alive and well and are being utilised in rap. Rap music is often narrative in nature, prioritising the stories rappers tell in its expression, thus rap can be a vehicle to recapture the orality and narrativity of Pentecostal/Charismatic expression.
1. Introduction Research outline, including boundaries of the Research, data set and presentation of the material 2. Methodology Methodological outline and theoretical principles Reflexive Principle: Tools and Positionality Strands of Data Collection and Generation: Participants, Lyrics and Interview Methods Strands of Data Analysis: Content Analysis, Narrative Analysis, Discourse Analysis & Combining Methods 3. Testimony and the Reflection on Experience Testimony, Spirit Baptism and Pentecostalism’s Theological Roots Interpretive Networks Conversion Narratives and Narrative Identity 4. Rap as a Vehicle for Authentic Expressions of Self Authenticity and the Validation of Self Authenticity and Location Rap as a Vehicle for Authentic Expressions of Self Authenticity of Belief - Rap in the Presentation of a Religious Self Rap and Relatability 5. The Dynamic of Individual and Communal Identity Testimony and the Interpretive Community Communities of Influence in the Data Identity and Orthopraxy 6. Constructing Self through Opposition External Conflict in the Construction of Identity Defining Rap through Opposition to Church Standards Faith as a Process: The Development of a Post-Conversion Religious Identity Internal Conflict 7. Conclusions

James F. Broad

Dr James F. Broad holds a Doctorate in Theology from Liverpool Hope University, awarded in January 2024, and is as an Associate Supervisor at Westcott House, Cambridge, for MA and PhD work. The book is an adaptation of his research. He is a rap artist himself, actively releasing music since 2011.