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Curriculum, it seems, has different interests for different people, especially when it comes to psychic and emotional investment. Here, one invests where one sees oneself mirrored. Referencing a published study (Author, 2011, 2014), my aim in this chapter is to discuss fragments from that study using the concepts of ‘investment,’ ‘sensuous,’ and ‘sensuality.’ The study focuses on a group of continental African youth who enter, so to speak, a ‘rhizome of Blackness,’ where Blackness is not one but multiple categories with multiple meanings and frames of reference. The end result, I will show, is, first, learning Black English as a Second Language (BESL) (instead of so-called ‘standard English’ or ESL) and, second, taking up and investing into Hip-Hop cultural identity, which these young people access in and through Black popular culture. I will offer, in conclusion, a terse discussion on what I am calling a ‘sensual curriculum of investment.’