Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
The Subject becoming the spectator
The subject of stereotypes is often also aware of their own desire to embrace and transmit a different acceptance of the stereotype. Black men have found that they often depend on the "coolness" of their masculinity as being a transforming device that makes other men yearn to embody it. This embrace has 2 meanings:
Monday, April 6, 2009
Friday, April 3, 2009
Gangsta Wonderland
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Follow the Leader
The other side of African American masculinity is the encouragement to embody and live within the “experienced” body. Even men who go to prison are glorified on being able to survive the system. These men are embraced as the “real man” stereotype. Their experience is held as “ideal” and incomparable to the “other” black man without this, so-called, experience. The experienced man is seen as conquering the world and defying all possible authority. Furthermore, their ability to sustain themselves within an institution (prison) is held as heroic. We can see this glorification held high in the gangsta-rap world with rappers having wars across boundaries. These boundaries are based on claims of “fake” experience versus “real-life” experience. This concept is frightening because it calls on the narrations of glorified violence based on real-life accounts. It thus encourages young men to go out and seek for these "experiences".
Lyrics from Hail Mary (50 Cent)
I got a head with no screws in it.
In addition, I remember once in an interview when 50 Cent (rival to rapper Ja Rule) was asked about his relation to his nemesis: He proceeded to call out Ja rule's Jehovah witness experience: claiming that when he was out in the tough street life, Ja Rule was selling Bibles door to door.
As we can see, there is a visible call towards an "ideal" masculinity even within the black community itself. We can therefore not claim to say that influence is purely permeable from outside sources. The task is to mediate an image we come to know about ourselves and the image others come to perceive about us. In "Subjects of Subjection", Annika Thiem talks about how one comes to be what one is and can be. Thiem sees the subject as "non-transparent to itself". In other words, black masculinity is formed through relations of power and in subjection to norms and social practices.
Friday, March 20, 2009
The Non-Present Image
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Black Men Becoming Aware
Excuse For Crime
Images From the Past
We have been conditioned to see black people not as individuals but rather, a group with a collective mentality for irresponsibility.
The black man in the past has been recognized as deviant by nature.
The image of black masculinity tells guys that if they're not adhering to masculinity norms they're likely to get eliminated from the realm occupied by “real” men. The very moment a man deviates from the stereotypical paradigms of masculinity; his role is offered to someone else. It means that, if a man, shows a modicum of weakness, he is now seen as an outsider to the embraced masculinity.
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Situations That Allow Constructs of Fear to Be Approved
*Gang Associations
*Black Men in Prison
*Videos Enforcing Language and Embrace of Violence
*Apparel
*Language and Figure of Speech
Limitation of Expression
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Hip Hop Has Saved Me
The Past Affecting the Future
One of the things that has been done since slavery is, to try and rob the black male of his masculinity. The black male had to earn their masculinity and often times, it was denied to them. They were isolated, alienated, and couldn't be allowed to be protectors of their own families. The black man was not only in physically chains but also, identity chains. Black men's masculinity, because of the difficulty that resided in obtaining it, became the single most important thing to the black male. It became something that can make them feel like men again. It became one thing that they can define by themselves.
Monday, March 16, 2009
The Limitations of Stereotyping
Sunday, March 15, 2009
The initiation into the stereotype: Black men Accepting their Representation
The black male has been and made exotic, sexualized, and exhausted in the markets. They have been stripped of their worth and commercialized at the market demand. As a result, of this capitalization, they have also been stripped of a more dynamic perception. The injustice is that, they have now turned into bodies that can only seem to “fit” certain, and often imaginary, spaces. Rarely are they given the justice of fitting in as doctors, teachers and leaders. The visual perception has forced them to be viewed as better suited for the systems that promise to re-socialize them, rehabilitate and, heal their “blackness”.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
The Unfair Judgement of "all black men"
The Language of Ghetto Ebonics: Whatc y'all Talkn' Bout?
Friday, March 13, 2009
Labels and Depictions
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Monday, March 9, 2009
Thou Shall Fear The Black Man
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Images worth thousands of words
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Studies in Stereotyping-The Black Male
The African American male has been denied a full right to their identity through the ways that he is depicted and allowed to express himself. The prominent image that arises from this stereotype is that of the African American male as being hyper-sexualized, lazy and, overly violent. This presentation often elicits a negative response from the media. The media then connotes this image as being applicable to the entire black, male, population. To the media, the black male carries a violent, automatic, instinct that is to be expected. Such superficial assumptions then extend into society and how we come to accept the image of a black man. For example, I have to say that each time I am brought to an awareness of a tremendous crime, I find myself praying.....