都市女孩,性感女孩以及黑人女性在嘻哈和数字空间的重新想象

Kyesha Jennings
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引用次数: 11

摘要

透过嘻哈女权主义的镜头,我们如何解读黑人女孩和女性在数字空间中的自我认同,这些数字空间明显与新的/重新混合的图像产生共鸣?更重要的是,当黑人女性说唱艺术家和他们的粉丝群破坏、颠覆或挑战嘻哈中占主导地位的性别脚本,以驾驭关于黑人女性性行为的更广泛的话语时,会发生什么?借鉴琼·摩根(Joan Morgan)的作品和嘻哈女权主义研究,本文旨在对《辣妹之夏》(hot girl summer)进行批判性解读。受休斯顿说唱歌手梅根·西·马莱在“现金屎”中的歌词启发,她在其中说唱了“真正的辣妹屎”,这个短语已经演变成一个传奇人物,不仅因为梅根的说唱巨星形象,也因为许多黑人女孩。根据梅根的说法,一个性感女孩的夏天是“关于女人和男人毫无歉意地做他们自己……玩得很开心,为他们的朋友炒作,做他们。”“辣妹之夏”告诉我们黑人女性在数字空间中培养社区方式的重大变化,她们如何在控制图像的系统中构建自己的身份,并与体面政治作斗争?为了用批判性的视角来解决这些问题,本文采用了以黑人女权主义和嘻哈女权主义为基础的跨学科方法,为数字嘻哈女权主义敏感性(DHHFS)提供了一种理论方法。关于黑人女性在数字空间中的表现,人们说得太少了。在数字空间中,她们想象着另一种性别表现,打破了霸权主义的比喻,参与了参与性文化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
City Girls, hot girls and the re-imagining of Black women in hip hop and digital spaces
Through a hip hop feminist lens, how are we to interpret black girls’ and women’s self-identification in digital spaces that visibly resonate with new/remixed images? And more importantly, what happens when black female rap artists and their fan base disrupt, subvert or challenge dominant gender scripts in hip hop in order to navigate broader discourses on black female sexuality? Drawing on the work of Joan Morgan and hip hop feminist scholarship in general, this essay aims to offer a critical reading of ‘hot girl summer’. Inspired by Houston rapper Megan Thee Stallion’s lyrics on ‘Cash Shit’, where she raps about ‘real hot girl shit’, the phrase has morphed into a larger-than-life persona not only for Megan’s rap superstar profile, but also for a number of black girls. According to Megan, a hot girl summer is ‘about women and men being unapologetically them[selves] […] having a good-ass time, hyping up their friends, doing [them]’. What does ‘hot girl summer’ tell us about significant changes in the ways that black women cultivate community in digital spaces, how they construct their identities within systems of controlling images and grapple with respectability politics? In order to address these questions with a critical lens, using an interdisciplinary approach grounded in black feminism and hip hop feminism, this essay offers a theoretical approach to a digital hip hop feminist sensibility (DHHFS). Too little has been said about black women’s representation in digital spaces where they imagine alternative gender performance, disrupt hegemonic tropes and engage in participatory culture.
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