preview

Gender In Rap Music

Better Essays

Gender in Blues and Rap Music
Study of the intersection of gender, race, and sexuality on the generational blues and rap music, specifically through the analysis of female musicians: Bessie Smith, Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, MC Lyte, and Salt N Pepa.

Anne Qiu
Intensive Study: Chicago Blues (Spring 2015)

BACKGROUND/INTRODUCTION

Music has long permeated the daily life of most African Americans. It has played a central role in the normal socialization process and during moments characterized by intense movements for social change, it has helped to shape the necessary political consciousness. Any attempt, therefore, to understand in depth the evolution of women’s consciousness within the Black community requires an examination of the music which has …show more content…

Most importantly, these two forms of music gave the African American female population a new voice. By taking full advantage and refusing silence and submissiveness, blues women and female rappers declared their equality with men in all arenas and publicly expressed their physical, sexual, and economic freedoms. The blues women openly challenged the gender politics implicit in traditional cultural representations of marriage, heterosexual love, and relationships. Like blues women, female rappers also challenged relationships between male and female and raised awareness for the distribution of power between the genders. In addition, the female rappers also openly fought for them as minority individuals by embracing African American female beauty and fighting against physical attributes that deemed undesirable by mainstream American standards of beauty. Rather than conforming to societal ways, female rappers and blues women work within and against dominant sexual and racial narratives in American culture to exposed the stereotypes and explored unfair contradictions. By so doing, they redefined women’s “place”. They forged and memorialized images of tough, resilient, and independent women who were unafraid neither of their own vulnerability nor of defending their right to be respected as autonomous human …show more content…

(1990). Black women and music: A historical legacy of struggle. In J. Braxton
& A. McLaughlin (Eds.) Wild women in the whirlwind: Afro-American culture and contemporary literary renaissance (pp. 3-21): New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers
University Press, 1990.

Davis, A. (1998). Blues legacies and black feminism. New York: Vintage Books.

Bowers, Jane. (1993) “I Can Stand More Trouble Than Any Little Woman My Size: Observations on the Meanings of the Blues of Estelle “Mama” Yancey”. American Music, 11:1, 28-53

Rose, T. (1994). Bad sistas: Black women rappers and sexual politics in rap music. In
Black noise: Rap music and black culture in contemporary America (pp. 146-
182). Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press.

Ryan, J and Calhoun III, L. (1996) “Gender or genre? Emotion models in commercial rap and country music”. Popular Music & Society, 20:2, 121-155

Norfleet, Dawn M. “Hip-Hop and Rap.” African American Music: An Introduction. Eds.
Mellonee Burnim & Portia Maultsby. New York Routledge,

Get Access