Hip Hop apologies

by Sokari on April 5, 2007

in African Women,Music

Chuck “Jigsaw” Creekmur of AllHipHop.com is calling for Hip Hop to apologise to all women especially women of colour for “bold misogyny and rampant sexism” – I would add to that an apology to the LGBT community for rampant homophobia which is conspicuously absent from Creekmur. Creekmur uses the analogy of the US Congress considering an apology for the enslavement of millions of Black people and the consequential institutional racism in American society. White people benefited economically by oppressing Black people and in the same way Black men have benefited economically by oppressing and denigrating Black women and preventing them from having equal access to the industry.

With rap, you have the men – typically Black men – who are using this art for economic gain and then you have the women – typically African American women or women of color who are relegated to the most base role in the culture.

The question is can Hip Hop (and Dancehall, Ragga – ) continue to sustain itself through a culture of abusive lyrics directed at women and the LGBT community. There is also an element of self-abuse within this culture of violence, bling and nihilism and again Creekmur uses the following analogy

When you eat your typical fast food for an extended period of time, you experience a number of adverse affects. Initially, you might simply gain weight, something remedied with exercise and change in dietary habits. However, if you continue to ingest the bad food, you will begin to suffer ailments that are much more difficult to fix. (Think high cholesterol, obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease).

Although an apology for slavery would be welcome, what is more important, as Creekmur points out is, if people “would just stop practising racism” misogyny, sexism and homophobia then I think most people would wavier the apology.

Tags: ;;
; ;

{ 1 trackback }

Black Looks
April 12, 2007 at 22:14

{ 10 comments… read them below or add one }

BronzeTrinity April 5, 2007 at 16:06

That would be great if they appologized. I think that all of this hate, violence, and materialism in music has to stop. It hurts us and the way the world perceives us. These people should not be our role models and we need to find someone else.

Reply

Sokari April 5, 2007 at 16:15

Yes an apology would be great. I was just walking today and a car drove past with a young black guy and the wheel and all i could here was bitch this bitch that. – Stopping it altogether would be much better – just stop! -

Reply

acolyte April 5, 2007 at 17:59

The sad thing is that socially conscious non profane rap is always put on the back burner by the record companies. For every Common who makes it there are 20 Nellys and %0 Cent(s) who are being promoted by the record labels.
Hip hop can do very well and suceed without the denigration of women.

Reply

c0dec April 5, 2007 at 20:16

uhm…hip hop is dead. well not really, real hip hop is just not played on the radio.

Reply

BronzeTrinity April 5, 2007 at 22:41

I went out of my way to get some old school hip hop. I’m going to listen to that. Anything that has a positive message about us and advice about how to uplift ourselves, not just sex, money, guns, and cursing.

Reply

Hathor April 6, 2007 at 18:26

The apology should come from the “Black Power” brothers who accepted the premise that black women had no place in the movement and her place was on her back. The white man had drill in to the black man that this was a matriarchal society, the black man bought this, not realizing that this was more divide and conquer. Thus still not all having real power, using misogyny and guns as a substitute for the real thing.
I want the apology from Kwame Ture. I have read where his statement was supposedly just a joke, but the fallout among the brothers has not been that of a joke. From my small place in the universe, see black women at that time relegated to the positions of handmaidens.

Reply

Sokari April 6, 2007 at 18:39

Hathor@ there are so many apologies to be made and by all means work on achieving these but i think the primary goal should be moving beyond apologies to stopping these discriminatory acts from taking place in the present and future.

Reply

Ababoy April 11, 2007 at 17:10

Obnoxious lyrics are not sustainable. An apology will be okay, but stopping the disparagement of women today and in future is the way forward. The only way forward…

Yes…I sneaked back.. but I always looked into Black looks..Awesome posts…

Reply

Sokari April 11, 2007 at 17:59

Ababoy@ great to see you back here and in your own space! Dont disappear again – yes the Arse are in a crisis – a crisis of Arsene loosing the plot!

Reply

Edwin Creekmur Jr April 21, 2007 at 17:08

An apology is great but black men have to not just stop verbally abusing women!!!!!!!!

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: