


Everything Remains Raw
Photographing Toronto's Hip Hop Culture from Analogue to Digital
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"...Everything Remains Raw endeavours to refresh Canadiana. The spray of a Krylon can, it argues, is every bit as Canadian as the hues of Algonquin granite." — The Globe and Mail
"Before the 6ix, there was T-dot, a nascent hip-hop scene bubbling up from Toronto’s Caribbean communities in the 1990s that laid the foundation for the Drakes of today, and those yet to be." — Toronto Star
"An in-depth look at Toronto’s burgeoning hip-hop scene from the 1980s until present day. ... Campbell offers sharp observations about the deep influence that photojournalists and hip-hop artists have made, while also exploring the politics and changing dynamics of the hip-hop experience. The book encourages readers to contemplate the deep connection members of the hip-hop community felt to the music and one another during important moments in the Toronto hip-hop scene. ...Everything Remains Raw encourages readers to ponder and broaden our vision of what we consider to be Canadian art and culture." — This Magazine
Mark V. Campbell is the founding director of Northside Hip Hop Archive and Adjunct Professor in the RTA School of Media at Ryerson University.