lsis 5230 Humanities Research Guide

The Art, History, and
Technology of DJing

A Research Guide to DJing, Hip-Hop Culture, Music Production, and Digital Creativity

DJing (Disc Jockeying) is more than playing songs. DJ's select, sequence, mix, manipulate, preserve, reinterpret, and transform sound. This guide helps students and researchers study DJing as a serious humanities topic connected to hip-hop history, Black cultural expression, African American music history, music production, copyright, sampling, archives, and digital creativity.

Why This Guide Exists

Many students know DJing through parties, campus events, clubs, radio, social media, and popular culture, but they may not know how to research it academically. This guide connects DJing to credible books, scholarly articles, music databases, digital archives, videos, copyright resources, professional organizations, and search strategies.

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A Performance Practice

DJing is a live musical practice involving technique, creativity, and performance. Turntablists treat the turntable and mixer as instruments.

Black Cultural Expression

DJing is deeply rooted in African American and Caribbean music traditions. It is a form of cultural memory, community building, and identity.

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A Humanities Topic

DJing intersects with history, archives, ethics, technology, authorship, copyright, and community, making it rich terrain for scholarly inquiry.

How to Use This Guide

Follow these six steps to build a strong research foundation in DJing studies.

Learn the Vocabulary

Start with What Is DJing? to understand key terms such as turntablism, beatmatching, scratching, sampling, remixing, and crate digging.

Build Historical Context

Visit History & Hip-Hop Origins to understand how DJing shaped hip-hop culture from the Bronx to the world.

Center Black Cultural Expression

Use Black Cultural Expression to connect DJing to African American music history, cultural memory, and scholarly research.

Find Scholarly Sources

Use Books, Articles & Databases to locate books, peer-reviewed articles, dissertations, and music reference tools.

Explore Primary Sources

Use Archives, Audio & Video for flyers, recordings, oral histories, documentaries, and archival collections.

Understand Copyright

Review Copyright, Sampling & Fair Use before writing about sampling, remixing, public-domain sound, AI music, or music ownership.

Three essential starting points for DJing and hip-hop research.

Rows of vinyl records filed in crates, representing archival hip-hop collections
Archive

Cornell Hip Hop Collection

The Cornell Hip Hop Collection preserves more than 250,000 items documenting hip-hop's origins and global spread. It is one of the strongest starting points for students researching early hip-hop, flyers, photographs, recordings, and DJ culture.

Best for: Early hip-hop history, event flyers, primary sources Explore Archive
Interior of a music library with shelves of recordings and research materials
Multimedia Collection

Smithsonian Anthology of Hip-Hop and Rap

This Smithsonian resource traces hip-hop's development through recordings, essays, photographs, and historical context. It is useful for students who need both musical examples and scholarly interpretation.

Best for: Curated listening, historical context, scholarly framing Learn More
Close-up of a turntable needle on a vinyl record, representing audio archiving and remixing
Digital Archive / Creative Tool

Library of Congress Citizen DJ

Citizen DJ provides free-to-use sounds from Library of Congress collections for remixing and creative exploration. It is useful for studying sampling, public-domain audio, digital creativity, and archival sound.

Best for: Sampling, public-domain audio, remix culture Explore Archive