This episode is perfect for anyone interested in urban sociology, what we can learn from hip hop artists, qualitative research, ‘getting out,’ and Wakanda Forever.
IN THIS EPISODE
- Piko explains his core research interest and how he sees his work.
- He shares what inspired his interest in ethnographic research.
- He talks about his course ‘Hip Hop and Urban Sociology’ and what Kendrick Lamar and 3D Na-Tee have to do with it.
- Piko answers what sociologists can learn from hip hop artists and what hip hop artists can learn from sociologists.
- He discusses qualitative research and ‘the beautiful process of collecting data and making sense of it.’
- He addresses whether his qualitative data is generalizable and ‘being as reflexive as possible’ in documenting his observations.
- Piko considers whether qualitative research is more literature than science.
- He discusses his course ‘Contemporary Race Theory‘ and whether we would be better off if the idea of race faded away.
- He answers whether his research makes normative judgments about how people should behave.
- Piko talks about his feelings leaving the communities he is studying and how he manages the guilt of ‘getting out.’
- He reflects on the movie ‘Black Panther’ and why ‘he isn’t down with Wakanda Forever.’
- He describes growing up in Ghana and how emigrating to the United States informed his approach to studying social life.
- Piko shares the song that inspired his first book, what changed his life at Ithaca College, and what his doctoral dissertation explored.
- He answers what question is on his mind and what he values most.