Now Playing
Connect with Us
Podcasts & RSS Feeds
| All Content |
| RSS |
| View all podcasts & RSS feeds | ||
Most Active Stories
- Getting To Know Midtown's 'Running Superman'
- Collector And Gallerist Byron Cohen Dies At 72
- Liberty Hospital Announces Layoffs, Citing Pending 'Health Care Storm'
- 5 Things You Should Know About The Genetically Modified Food You’re Probably Eating
- Insight Into The Trials And Joys Of Transgender Relationships
Teenage Life
5:04 pm
Mon March 12, 2012
Provocative Urban Lit Attracts Teen Audiences
In recent years, there’s been a renaissance of books about tough, inner-city life which are popular with teen audiences. The genre has been called urban fiction, hip-hop fiction or ghetto lit, and it’s often filled with profanity, sex, violence and illegal activity. Some of popular titles include Thugs and the Women Who Love Them, Hooker to Housewife and Golden Hustla.
While the genre seems to keep a technology-saturated generation reading, the content of these books is troubling to a lot of parents and teachers. McKayla Crouss, a student at Washington High School in Kansas City Kansas, recently wrote a story about this issue for the school newspaper called Freedom to Read that won a Kansas Scholastic Press Association award.
KCUR's Susan B. Wilson caught up with Crouss at Washington High School, and talked to some of her classmates who are fans of the urban literature genre.
Most Washington High students seem to support urban fiction, but many parents and educators have wondered if high school and middle school students should be allowed to read the books. Should libraries assign movie-style ratings to urban fiction? The West Wyandotte branch of the Kansas City, Kansas Public Library is the source of a lot of these books for young readers. And the staff says they have no plans to change that.
This story was produced for KC Currents, which airs Sundays at 5pm with a repeat Mondays at 8pm. To listen on your own schedule, subscribe to the KC Currents podcast.
