Pulitzer-Winning Rapper Kendrick Lamar Becomes Subject of New College Course
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Kendrick Lamar's life and lyrics will be the subject of a new fall semester course at Temple University, taught by Professor Timothy Welbeck. |
Starting this fall, Temple University will offer a course titled "Kendrick Lamar and the Morale of M.A.A.D City," an Afrocentric deep dive into the Pulitzer Prize-winning rapper’s life, lyrics and cultural weight. Designed and taught by professor Timothy Welbeck, a respected scholar in Africology and African American Studies, the course aims to unpack the socioeconomic, political and personal factors that have shaped Lamar — and the world that shaped him.
“This isn’t just about rap lyrics,” Welbeck told NBC10 in a recent interview. “Kendrick Lamar is one of the defining voices of his generation. His art and life reflect the Black experience in deeply telling ways.”
Welbeck, who also serves as director of Temple’s Center for Anti-Racism and is a hip-hop artist himself, has previously taught courses on Tupac, Jay-Z and the evolution of Black culture through music. With this new offering, he hopes to explore Lamar’s full trajectory — from his Compton roots to the Grammy stage and global influence — through an Africological lens that centers Black expression and self-actualization.
The course arrives at a critical cultural moment. Lamar’s recent lyrical feud with Drake reignited debates over authenticity in hip-hop, while his explosive anthem "Not Like Us" — a searing takedown of celebrity ego and false alliances — has become a cultural flashpoint, sparking industry lawsuits and think pieces alike. At the same time, his co-headlining Grand National Tour with SZA was one of the year’s highest-grossing, cementing his status as both icon and provocateur.
Students in Welbeck’s class will study that tension head-on. From Lamar’s major-label debut "good kid, m.A.A.d city" to the densely layered "To Pimp a Butterfly" and his latest effort "GNX," the course promises a sharp examination of hip-hop as not just music, but social commentary — shaped by public policy, systemic inequality and Black resilience.
Beyond lectures, the course will include guest speakers from the music industry who have worked with Lamar, offering students rare insight into both his creative process and the business machinery behind the music.
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