Quantcast The Signal
College Media Network

News

Features

Entertainment

Opinion

Sports

Editorial

Nation & World

 

Latest Issue:

Of guns and gangstas: hip-hop cultureFrom

By Luciano Grullon

Issue date: 4/11/07 Section: Features
  • Print
  • Email
Members of the panel discuss depictions of violence and masculinity in hip-hop culture.
Media Credit: Pablo Moretto
Members of the panel discuss depictions of violence and masculinity in hip-hop culture.

"Hip-Hop Is Dead." This proposition is the title of Nas' latest hit. But is it really dead? Or is it dying?

On April 3, the Office of Anti-Violence Initiatives, alongside co-sponsoring organizations Alpha Kappa Alpha, Chi Upsilon Sigma, Black Student Union, Lambda Theta Alpha, Lambda Tau Omega, PRISM, Zeta Phi Beta, Phi Beta Sigma, Mu Sigma Upsilon, National Council of Negro Women, Sigma Sigma Sigma and Phi Kappa Psi, hosted an evening that shed light on the negativity of hip-hop that could potentially contribute to its demise.

The event commenced with a screening of the documentary "HIP-HOP: Beyond Beats and Rhymes." It was produced, directed and written by Byron P. Hurt. The goal of the film is to examine the representation of manhood in the hip-hop culture. Hurt posed the question of whether guns have become the symbol of what it means to be a man. According to Hurt, weapons such as guns have become representative symbols of contemporary masculinity, a blatant premise illustrated in the film. For example, in 50 Cent's music video "Many Men," a gun is used as a means to let out anger - an example which may potentially be perceived as proper and acceptable by young fans.

Another important point the film reinforced is the fact that hip-hop has had a significant impact on the desensitization of violence in contemporary society, especially among youth. Homicide is the leading cause of death for black men between 15 and 34. "We must challenge the notion that it is OK to kill or to die early," a minister in the film said.

Hurt further augmented the powerful criticism by adding how hip-hop paints women as nothing but sex objects in the majority of its music videos and lyrics. According to Hurt, the normalized vulgar terminology that represents desensitized concepts must not be dismissed as it too often is. In the film, many young aspiring artists are seen emulating the true popular artists by using the same lyrical style and themes: money, drugs and sex. One of the aspiring artists interviewed said one must be "thuggish" to be successful.

The film also emphasized how one's environment is a critical factor to consider when discussing people and violence. Where one grows up, what he watches (movies, films, etc.) and what others wear are all influential factors that could end up affecting an individual in the long run.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

How do you plan to utilize reading days?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement