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Stereotypes: The Role Of Women In Hip-Hop Culture

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Over the years, hip-hop culture serves to express any alienated and outraged in African American society. Rappers were aspired to express themselves through the art of music. Although men dominated rap culture, women contributed to this controversial music. It took time for society to realize females can rap too like their male counterparts. The black female identity in a male rap culture focused on how a woman acts and should act in the presence of males. One must focus on the female perspective of rap and explore the messages in their songs differ from a male artist. Female rappers had to overcome being subjected to cultural misogyny and negative stereotypes about women. During the 80’s and 90’s was the upbringing of the female hip-hop industry domination in the charts, rappers like Mc Lyte, Queen Latifa, and Salt-N Peppa contribute to this legacy. Hip-hop culture and culture’s misogyny can be traced back to the golden era of hip-hop. In hip-hop, culture terms for men created an image of a “big-man persona” such as “baller” “pimp” and derogatory phrases such as “bitch” “ho” became common phrases to distinguish women. The rapper persona was to have a macho attitude, extravagant living, and having multiple women beside them was the way to express the Hip-hop lifestyle (Layne 1). Artists such as N.W.A., one the few pioneers of 90’s gangsta rap has associated their music with misogyny. The song titled “A Bitch Iz A Bitch” in the album Straight Outta Compton revolutionize

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