At some point, I'm going to produce a larger project on my engagements with Rap Genius. In the meantime, I'm publishing short entries based on my experiences utilizing the site. 
Entries:
2013
• September 16: Becoming a Rap Genius (Literature course for Spring 2014) 
• September 12: Frederick Douglass and Rap Genius 
• July 18: When my Rap Genius activities become less fun, though purposeful 
• July 15: An Ex-Slave's Letter Arrives on Rap Genius  
• June 26: Sister-scientist astronomers remix that classic Wu on Rap Genius  
• June 25: Analyzing the poetry/lyrics of high school students on Rap Genius  
• June 25: From RapGenius to Science Genius 
• May 22: How to read poetry like a Rap Genius 
• May 20: From RapGenius to Cultural Historian to Marketing Analyzer? 
• May 9: From OHHLA to Rap Genius 
• April 16: Jay-Z & Zora Neale Hurston on swag: Rap Genius notes by Kenton Rambsy
• April 15: RapGenius and Digital Humanities at CLA 
• April 5: Becoming a Verified Artist on Rap Genius 
• April 4: Vince Manuel on the Rap Genius Experience: An Interview 
• April 3: Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes & Rap Genius  
• April 3: Follow-up on the 7 Ways Rap Genius encourages participants by Kenton Rambsy 
• April 2: 7 Ways that RapGenius Assists Digital African American Literary Scholarship by Kenton Rambsy
2012 
• December 20: Rap Genius and access to black poetry by Kenton Rambsy 
• December 19: Rap Genius as a space for sharing expertise by Simone Savannah 
• December 17: A Malcolm X project on Rap Genius, Pt. 1 
• December 17: What if African American poetry enthusiasts were like rap geniuses? 
• December 17: Utilizing the Poetry Foundation and Rap Genius   
• December 17: Reading Rap Genius: An Introduction 
Related:
Assorted Notebooks    
 
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