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College hosts author of book on hip hop and women
February 12
“Women have made gains. I think men feel it. They feel
the pinch.”
T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting
She’s
married and has a 5-year-old daughter, but T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting
sure isn’t your typical mom.
The Vanderbilt University professor and author has a bone to pick
with the new gender politics, and hip-hop music and strip clubs
in particular, and she’s written a book about it.
The book, “Pimps up, Ho’s Down: Hip Hop’s Hold
on Young Black Women,” deals with how men treat women and
how women see themselves.
Sharpley-Whiting will talk about her latest book as part of the
College’s Black History Month celebration.
The College community and the public are invited to hear her presentation
on February 12, 12:30-1:30 p.m., in the Performing Arts Center
and again at 7 p.m. at the Magnolia Avenue Campus. The event is
free.
“One of the arguments of the book,” she said, “is
that our youth culture and hip-hop music have helped shape the
way young men and women view one another. I think global and economic
opportunities have certainly redefined gender relations in very
tangled ways. Young men are competing with young women in ways
they never had to before.”
Sharpley-Whiting says this has resulted in “hyper-masculine”
men and “hyper-feminine, hyper-sexualized” women.
“As Americans, we tend to want ‘manly men,’”
she said. “It is that kind of ethos that has led men to
feel women are encroaching on their space. If you feel like, ‘Here
comes Hillary Clinton stepping into a man’s world,’
you can turn to popular culture, where women have their place—at
the bottom.
“You can see a half-naked woman not just in hip-hop videos
but in rock videos, or you can go to Hooters. Strip clubs are
more popular than they have ever been. They’re mainstream
now. There’s a reason why those kinds of venues exist. A
lot of it has to do with the gains women have made. With the privileges,
you have to expect some backlash. It’s a way in which you
can still have the fantasy of what women should be.”
Is American culture more misogynistic than other developed countries?
“I think it comes out in different ways in the U.S.,”
said Sharpley-Whiting. “In other countries that we consider
less democratic—like India—they’ve already had
women candidates for president. Simultaneously, we see in some
of these countries women who might not have the same access to
jobs or education. There are certainly things we get right and
some things other countries get right. We don’t like to
deal with class, and we’re still behind on race and gender.”
Sharpley-Whiting says she became interested in women’s roles
in hip-hop music gradually.
“I’m a person of the hip-hop generation,” she
said. “I came up with the music and watched the culture
evolve. It was interesting to me to see how women became very
central to corporate bottom lines. The mass-media appeal of hip
hop and its global appeal are very dependent on young women. The
reason it’s so profitable is that we have a lot of eye candy.”
She believes part of the solution is to become active consumers.
By listening to alternative hip hop, rather than commercial stations,
fans will have a more diverse selection. In addition, certain
types of music shouldn’t be played at certain times of the
day, she says, because they’re not appropriate for children.
“At four o’clock in the afternoon, that’s an
FCC issue. At 10 at night, that’s a parenting problem,”
she said.
Sharpley-Whiting teaches on a variety of topics, from 18th and
19th century French narrative to Jazz Age Paris to film and black
popular culture. She is director of the Program in African American
and Diaspora Studies and director of the W.T. Bandy Center for
Baudelaire and Modern French Studies at Vanderbilt.
Her books include “Negritude Women” (2002), “Black
Venus: Sexualized Savages, Primal Fears, and Primitive Narratives
in French.”
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