Basic Black
A Conversation with Author Tracy Sharpley-Whiting
1920 brought women's suffrage. The 1960s gave rise to a new wave of women's liberation and civil rights. Today, a new black gender politics is being shaped by hip-hop, according author and scholar Tracy Sharpley-Whiting. And the results are not necessarily progressive, she says.
In her 2007 book, Pimps Up, Ho's Down: Hip-Hop's Hold on Young Black Women, Sharpley-Whiting, a professor of African American studies at Vanderbilt University in [Nashville], Tenn., writes that the new black gender politics is defined, in some cases, by hip-hop's commercial reliance on images of overexposed young black women.
A Conversation with Author Tracy Sharpley-Whiting
1920 brought women's suffrage. The 1960s gave rise to a new wave of women's liberation and civil rights. Today, a new black gender politics is being shaped by hip-hop, according author and scholar Tracy Sharpley-Whiting. And the results are not necessarily progressive, she says.
In her 2007 book, Pimps Up, Ho's Down: Hip-Hop's Hold on Young Black Women, Sharpley-Whiting, a professor of African American studies at Vanderbilt University in [Nashville], Tenn., writes that the new black gender politics is defined, in some cases, by hip-hop's commercial reliance on images of overexposed young black women.
A Hat-Tip to Echidine of the Snakes
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