Article Evaluation
- Hip Hop Feminism - I'm going to speak more about the separate categories of hip hop and go more in depth about the figures who have knowingly/unknowingly contributed to hip hop feminism over the years
- i'm Going to talk about individual figures and talk about each of the following
- Their most feminist work
- what makes them a feminist
- how they acknowledge their feminism
- their genre of hip hop
- location
- when talking about the separate categories of hip hop i'm going to talk about certain people in particular who have demonstrated hip hop feminism
- Cardi B is a hero who is vocal about women's right and supporting women's choices.[1] She constantly breaks barriers and shares her opinions using platforms such as instagram, and Snapchat. Cardi preaches her brand of feminism founded on taking advantage of opportunities, or in street vocabulary, hustling. [2]She is vocal of her love for feminism despite her vernacular and how society paints her out to be. If I’m going to apologize for something is for not knowing what are the right terms to call people .You guys want me to be something that I’m not I’m not going to let you make me feel like I’m something that I’m not .Ya so quick to bash but not educate . She makes her role in feminism clear “Being a feminist is such a great thing and some people feel like someone like me can’t be as great as that,"[3]
Nicki Minaj entered the scene in hip hop 2009, Nicki Minaj has used her platform to highlight colorist and racism in the slut shaming of women in the industry. When Minaj received negative feedback after releasing the cover art for “Anaconda,” she took to her Instagram to highlight the inconsistent and—let’s be honest—racist reactions to her displaying her own body. She wrote “Angelic. Acceptable. Lol” alongside photos of white Sports Illustrated models, topless and arching their backs, with their barely-covered bottoms on the cover of the magazine.[4] When Lady Gaga uses her body as a form of expression, she's an “artist.” When Nicki Minaj owns her own sexuality, she's slut-shamed. [5]
Princess Nokia is a Puerto Rican HipHop artist from New York and a “Nuyorican urban feminist”[6] She acknowledges her hip hop work as feminism and continues to speak and perform femininity as a force to be reckoned with. She uses her work to voice her views on feminist politics as well as issues affecting marginalized communities. "I talk about small breasts, suffering from child abuse.... my lyrical content, my subject matter is not about aggression, or violence, or materialism, but about spirituality, cultural diaspora. Subject matters of black and brown women. Although I do speak on really flashy boastful things, because I am a flashy son of a b****. I've created Feminism again in Hip-Hop, it's exciting, it's wonderful."[7]
Robyn Rihanna Fenty, better known by her stage name Rihanna is a Barbadian singer, songwriter, and actress. Rihanna practices a very different and almost anachronistic type of feminism.[8] Hey gothic and rebellious aesthetics make her a notable artist in the industry. Rihanna is known for her subliminal and symbolic work and lyricism. She uses music videos and her songs to voice issues affecting marginalized groups. Rihanna being unapologetic has contributed to the sexual liberation of women. She owns her sexuality and uses it as a tool to promote women to do the same. In a May 2013 interview with MTV, The Vagina Monologues writer and feminist Eve Ensler praised the singer, saying, "I'm a huge Rihanna fan, I think she has a kind of agency over her sexuality and she's open about her sexuality, she has enormous grace and she's immensely talented." [9]
This is a user sandbox of AngelLeger. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
Nice bullet points outlining what you want to write about Mtcandy101 (talk) 05:20, 16 May 2018 (UTC)
- ^ Williams, Sherri (27/September/2017). "Cardi B: Love & Hip Hop's unlikely feminist hero".
{{cite journal}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help); Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Lai, Julianna (01/21/2018). "Back in Bodak: On Cardi B, Vulgarity, and Feminism".
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Lasimone, Ashely (02/11/2018). "Cardi B on Being a Feminist: 'Anything a Man Can Do, I Can Do'". Billboard.
{{cite magazine}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Lam, Amy (08/21/2014). "NICKI MINAJ'S UNAPOLOGETIC SEXUALITY IS NOT A CRISIS". bitchmedia.org.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Lam, Amy. "NICKI MINAJ'S UNAPOLOGETIC SEXUALITY IS NOT A CRISIS". BitchMedia.org.
- ^ Meisel, Ana. "How Feminism Opens Varying Perspectives & The Consciousness Of Ourselves In The Material World" (PDF).
- ^ Rap Genius (08/16/2017). "Princess Nokia "G.O.A.T." Official Lyrics & Meaning | Verified". Youtube.com.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ Ejlerskov, Ditte. "BowDownBitches" (PDF).
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ "PEOPLE'S 10 Best Dressed Stars of 2008". PEOPLE.com. Retrieved 2018-05-15.