Analysis Of Fly Girls Bits And Hoes

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DeAndreah Hollowell WGS 343 Weekley Hip Hop Feminism: For Whom Do we Wreck It? Joan Morgan’s “Fly Girls, Bitches, and Hoes” begins with an excerpt from a Vibe Magazine essay detailing the narrator’s first hand experience in the hip hop community as a woman, who came to love the music of its emcees, while battling with the sexism present both in rap lyrics and the men who wrote them. The conclusion is rather bittersweet, with the narrator resolving to continue being a part of the community, despite the ways its most prominent voices may degrade her and women like her, out of a familial kind to love. Because Joan Morgan considers herself a member of that same community she feels similarly compelled to recognize the ways Black men have inflicted pain and trauma onto Black women, using her own account of a family friend’s death as a result of the aforementioned phenomena. Morgan notes that Black men aren’t simply …show more content…

Glazing over these ‘gold digging’ tendencies as well as video girls’ willingness to objectify themselves in favor of viewing Black women as the perpetual victim of Black men reinforces the idea that Black women lack agency, and are incapable of participating in oppressive behavior. Morgan asserts that Black women can and should recognize their lack of self confidence and willingness to be objectified, the ways they treat each other poorly, the ways Black men hurt, and the ways they hurt us, at the same time. Rather than a fighting match to determine who’s correct in their contributions and consumption of hip hop and who’s wrong, Morgan concludes that these engagements should be a loving dialogue to

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