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Hip Hop And Rap Music Essay

610 Words3 Pages

“Money on my mind and mind on my money” is a well known line in Hip Hop and Rap songs. This line is even mentioned in the documentary Hip Hop Beyond Beats and Rhymes when the talk about Snoop Dogg's Gin And Juice song is being examined. This film explores Hip Hop and explains the violence, masculinity, and overall culture of Rap in particular. In a scene from Daytona, Florida a group of young women are asked how they feel when they are called derogatory names because of how they are dressed. One woman responds, “It’s not really directed towards you personally. I know he’s not talking to me. I know what I am.” At the same time, one young man explains, “You know who are the b***s cause you see how they are dressed…sistas don’t dress like that.” If mainstream hip-hop has put manhood in a box, how has the music reinforced a limited view of what it means to be a woman? Should women feel free to dress like the women in Hip Hop music videos AND feel that they should be free of harassment? …show more content…

In a world with so many diverse genres of media I do not conjecture that one in particular could. Although rap is prominent so is country, classic rock, indie and so on. To say that only rap encloses manhood in a box and leads limiting views of woman is unjust. This is partly the reason for Communication and Pop Culture grasping a knowledge of all genres. So to revise the question to something along the lines of has media in general put manhood in a box and caused limited views of being woman? Would be more pragmatic. In answering the revised question, Gender roles are put into action by an early age through yes music, television, and even watching the parentals. These gender roles model what is acceptable as a man and

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