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Video vixen

A video vixen (also referred to as a hip hop honey or video girl[2]) is a woman who models and appears in hip hop-oriented music videos.[3][4] From the 1990s to the early 2010s, the video vixen image was a staple in popular music, particularly within the genre of hip hop.[5] The video vixen first came around in the late 1980s when the hip-hop culture began to emerge into its own lifestyle, although was most popular in American popular culture during the 1990s and 2000s.[6] Many video vixens are aspiring actors, singers, dancers, or professional models.[7] Artists and vixens have been criticized for allegedly contributing to the social degradation of black women.[8][3][9] Latinas are also degraded and hyper-sexualized in hip hop music videos because they are seen as objects of sexual desire in rap music videos.[10]

The rapper Nicki Minaj in concert. In her early career, Minaj was often described as a video vixen.[1]

Origin of the video vixen edit

The video vixen is believed to have arrived around the late 80s when hip-hop was starting to take over as its own genre in the music industry.[6] At this time, women were used to create sex appeal in music videos while still being in the background. It wasn't until the late 1990s when the women came to the center of many videos.[6] The concept of the video vixen is seen to derive from the historical Jezebel stereotype that is typically placed upon black women. The term jezebel is used in reference to a hyper-sexual woman; she often is someone who is depicted as sexually promiscuous and uses her body to get what she wants.[11][3] The video vixen is believed to be the modernization of the Jezebel stereotype.[8] According to Meagan Ford it is an opportunity for women to use their features and sexuality in order to create wealth.[8] The vixens were there to enhance the male artist's persona of having a lot of money and women available to them at any time.[6] The women not only had to please the directors and artists but the audience as well. This concept sold because "the males wanted to see that and the girls wanted to be that."[12] This statement is made by music video director Dr. Teeth, who in the documentary also mentions how these women "had the curves, she had the face, and she looked like the chick that was around the way that you could get at."[12]

Social aspect edit

The work of video vixens and their portrayal in music videos have drawn criticism. Meagan Ford, Stephanie Stevenson, Kate Conrad, Travis Dixon, and Yuanyuan Zhang express concern on how video vixens are placed in subordinate and submissive roles while often depicted as sexual objects.[8][3][9][13] These authors believe that these depictions place male artists in positions of power which they say contribute to the representation of males as the dominant gender. Models are depicted as sexual objects. Signs of male power and the use of derogatory language towards women such as "bitch" and "slut" by artists contributes to the narrative that women are the inferior sex.[14][15][16]

In 2004, Nelly's video for his song "Tip Drill" came under particular criticism for its depiction and sexual objectification of women.[17][18] While some people pointed out that the women who appeared in Nelly's video voluntarily chose to participate,[19] others insisted that male rappers continue to sexually objectify hip hop models[13] while denying that the hip hop artists' career is, at least in part, based on the exploitation of other people.[20]

In 2005, former hip hop music video model Karrine Steffans authored the book Confessions of a Video Vixen, in which she depicts the degradation of women in the world of hip hop. The book's publisher describes it as "part tell-all, part cautionary tale".[21] The book went on to be a best seller in the US.[22] Karrine Steffans was one of a few women who decided to share her personal experience as a vixen with the world. Her book was set as the standard vixen experience by society because it was believed to confirm people's speculations about the industry.[23] Steffans is just one example of a vixen however and because of this vixens such as Gloria Velez and Melyssa Ford had a problem with her book. They explained how their experience was not the same as hers and how she was essentially a nobody until the book was released. Her referencing other vixens was seen as an act of forcing her narrative onto their experience.[12] Another hip hop model, Candace Smith, said in an XXL interview, "what I've seen on [hip hop music video] sets is complete degradation."[24]

The video vixens' effect on Black women edit

In the world of music videos, the representation of black women as video vixens has been a complex and evolving narrative, deeply intertwined with societal perceptions and historical contexts. Historically, black women have faced distinct challenges within the industry, where their portrayal often reinforced negative stereotypes or hypersexualized images. These portrayals frequently depict black women in roles that emphasize exaggerated sexuality, submissiveness, or aggression, aligning with historical stereotypes deeply rooted in societal prejudices.[25] These misrepresentations create a narrow and limited view of black femininity, painting black women as objects of desire or as individuals solely defined by their physical attributes.[26] These portrayals also set unrealistic beauty ideals and narrow standards, often emphasizing physical attributes over other qualities, leading to the marginalization and erasure of the multifaceted identities of black women.[27] Such portrayals not only diminish the diverse identities and experiences of black women but also contribute to the normalization of these damaging stereotypes within broader popular culture.[28] This influence extends beyond the entertainment industry, affecting how black women are perceived and valued in society.[29] The overemphasis on hypersexualized images of black women in music videos not only shapes perceptions within the black community but also impacts wider societal perceptions, contributing to the reinforcement of harmful stereotypes and limiting opportunities for nuanced representations.[30][31]  By consistently showcasing black women in these narrowly defined roles, music videos often perpetuate the objectification of black women, impacting societal perceptions and perpetuating misconceptions about their character, worth, and agency.[32] Consequently, these representations can negatively impact the self-perception and self-worth of black women, as they navigate societal expectations and confront the pressure to conform to narrowly defined beauty and behavioral norms perpetuated by these portrayals in music videos.[33][34]

The topic of video vixens has created a lot of debate on the representation of Black women, such as author Faatimah Soloman's argument that it has contributed to the hyper-sexualization of black women. She explains in her article "The Exploitation Of Women Of Color In Music Videos Needs To End" how black women are deemed sexual beings due to their physical features. Video vixens are believed to be the reinforcement of these negative stereotypes placed upon black women. They are often referred to as stereotypical tropes because of their glamorization of embodying the stereotypes typically placed on women of color.[35] She expands her argument by mentioning how these stereotypes lead to exclusion of Black women in relation to their "social and intellectual contributions", often because they are only praised for their bodies.[35]

This idea also correlates with Nicole Heller's explanation of Objectification theory and one- dimensional womanhood. These theories define the portrayal of black women in hip-hop as it aims to separate the female body from her personality in order to focus on just her body.[36] Heller mentions how Nelly swiping a card through the rear end of a vixen in his Tip Drill music video visually represents the ideology of the Black woman's body being a commodity.[36][8] The subculture of the video vixen represents black women and women of color as objects that can literally be bought with a credit card instead of human beings. Author Amanda Rodriguez however does mention how these women were considered to be a "luxury commodity".[11] This means that the artists and labels gave them a glamorized experience in return for their work. It was temporary for most but for the vixens who became famous they truly were able to get paid like the artist.[12]

The video vixen is criticized for having a negative effect on women, as they are believed to set unrealistic beauty standards, and could have created the need to change themselves in order to fit said standards.[11]

Black women in hip hop music videos are often portrayed as the "jezebel" stereotype but presenting them as light skinned and thinner.[37]

Female rappers as video vixens edit

Women or female rappers such as Lil' Kim and Trina got criticized by T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting who called them a "peculiar place of cultural antipathy".[1][38]

Female rappers who have shown themselves off as "video vixens" include Nicki Minaj, Trina, Eve, Rasheeda, Foxy Brown, Remy Ma, Da Brat, Jacki-O, Shawnna, Gangsta Boo, LoLa Monroe, Diamond from the hip-hop group Crime Mob, and many others.[39]

On the other hand, these artists use their bodies and sexuality to reclaim their own individuality and self. For instance, Minaj talks about how she is aware of her position as a black woman/female rapper, and she is outspoken when it comes to empowering herself and other women. She also uses her body with the intent of dominating over the male expression of female sexuality, and she talks about how "it's Barbie, bitch!" has become her catchphrase to assert herself and her existence.[1][36] Author Nicole Heller uses Nicki Minaj's Anaconda music video (2014) as an example of how female artists are reclaiming their sexualities and power. Anaconda is a song that seeks to embrace large behinds and curvy bodies.[36] Minaj samples Sir Mix-A-Lot's "Baby Got Back" with the intent of transforming the objectification of the female body and how curvy women specifically are objectified in the hip-hop industry. She uses her body in order to establish her dominance and portray how she is in full control of her body and sexuality.[36]

Other artists of Afro-Caribbean origins like Cardi B (alongside Nicki Minaj as well) are analyzed to be using this hyper-sexual image as a way to assert their own existence and self-representation as Afro-Caribbean women who are sexy yet worthy of freedom, and it counters what could be oppressive norms that fit the respectability politics.[40]

In parallel to that, the role of women in the hip hop world wasn't limited to only being video vixens. Two artists in the early era of hip hop, rapper Roxanne Shante and rap group Salt-N-Pepa, were well-known for rapping about defending the image of women.[39] They were responding to male hip hop artists who habitually degraded women. Other artists such as Missy Elliott, Lauryn Hill, Erykah Badu and Queen Latifah advocated being strong independent black women.[41] Moreover, according to Heller, they asserted their sexuality without being in a position of hyper-sexuality themselves.[36]

Penn State PhD student Murali Balaji quoted a 1984 essay from American writer and activist Audre Lorde in connection to black girls who are considered video vixens: "If I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's fantasies for me and eaten alive."[31]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Aun Qi Koh (September 1, 2012). . Political Beanie. Archived from the original on November 25, 2018.[self-published source?]
  2. ^ Shalit, Wendy (2007). Girls Gone Mild: Young Women Reclaim Self-Respect and Find It's Not Bad to Be Good. New York: Random House. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4000-6473-1. [...] girls of color have a whole aspect of hip-hop with those horrible videos and the rise of the hip-hop honey or video girl.
  3. ^ a b c d Stevenson, Stephanie (2010). "Scholarship and Empowerment in the Age of the Video Vixen: Promoting Black Adolescent Females' Academic Success". The University of Maryland McNair Scholars Undergraduate Research Journal. 2: 269–286. hdl:1903/10728.
  4. ^ Fitts, Mako (2008). ""Drop It like It's Hot": Culture Industry Laborers and Their Perspectives on Rap Music Video Production". Meridians. 8 (1): 211–235. doi:10.2979/MER.2008.8.1.211. JSTOR 40338918. S2CID 197654934.
  5. ^ Story, Kaila A. "Performing Venus-From Hottentot to Video Vixen." Home Girls Make Some Noise: Hip-hop Feminism Anthology. By Gwendolyn D. Pough, Mark Anthony. Neal, and Joan Morgan. Mira Loma, CA: Parker Pub., 2007. N. pag. Print.
  6. ^ a b c d White, Brooklyn (August 28, 2019). "The Evolution of Hip-Hop's Video Vixen". Okayplayer.
  7. ^ Sharpley-Whiting, T. Denean. Pimps up, Ho's down: Hip Hop's Hold on Young Black Women. New York: New York University Press, 2007, p. 26, ISBN 978-0-8147-4014-9.
  8. ^ a b c d e Ford, Meagan Dawnavette (2009). Modern-day Jezebel: A social critique on 'Confessions of a Video Vixen', by Karrine Steffans, using Patricia Hill Collins' Black feminist theory (Thesis). ProQuest 304896050.
  9. ^ a b Conrad, Kate; Dixon, Travis; Zhang, Yuanyuan (2009). "Controversial Rap Themes, Gender Portrayals and Skin Tone Distortion: A Content Analysis of Rap Music Videos". Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 53 (1): 134–156. doi:10.1080/08838150802643795. S2CID 51858666.
  10. ^ Rivera, R. (February 7, 2003). New York Ricans from the Hip Hop Zone. Springer. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-4039-8167-7.
  11. ^ a b c Rodriguez, Amanda (March 19, 2015). "Implications: Negative and Positive". Video Vixens.
  12. ^ a b c d Full Length: How Video Models Changed The Music Industry | VIXEN., retrieved October 31, 2022
  13. ^ a b Stange, Mary Zeiss; Carol K. Oyster; Jane Sloan. Encyclopedia of Women in Today's World. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Reference, 2011, p. 695, ISBN 978-1-4129-7685-5.
  14. ^ Hall, Ann C.; Mardia J. Bishop. Pop-Porn: Pornography in American Culture. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2007, p. 8, ISBN 978-0-275-99920-9.
  15. ^ Jeffries, Michael P. Thug Life: Race, Gender, and the Meaning of Hip-Hop. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011, p. 155, ISBN 978-0-226-39584-5.
  16. ^ Keyes, Cheryl Lynette. Rap Music and Street Consciousness. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2002, p. 220, ISBN 978-0-252-02761-1.
  17. ^ "Nelly feels the heat". The Chicago Tribune (April 2, 2005), accessed October 1, 2011.
  18. ^ Arce, Rose (March 3, 2005). "Hip-hop portrayal of women protested". CNN.
  19. ^ . USA Today. AP. April 23, 2004. Archived from the original on July 14, 2004. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  20. ^ Rose, Tricia. The Hip Hop Wars: What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop - And Why It Matters. New York: BasicCivitas, 2008, p. 177, ISBN 978-0-465-00897-1.
  21. ^ Steffans, Karrine (2005). . HarperCollins. Archived from the original on December 12, 2005. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  22. ^ "Best Sellers: Hardcover Nonfiction". The New York Times. July 24, 2005. Archived from the original on January 30, 2013.
  23. ^ Ladel, Lewis. "The Portrayal of African American Women in Hip-Hop Videos". ScholarWorks at WMU.
  24. ^ Salaam, Khalid (2006). . XXL Magazine. Harris Publications. Archived from the original on January 17, 2006. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  25. ^ Matthews, Annalycia D., "Hyper-Sexualization of Black Women in the Media" (2018). Gender & Sexuality Studies Student Work Collection. 22. https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/gender_studies/22
  26. ^ Broadnax, Jamie O. "Objectification of women in rap music videos." (Winter 2019).
  27. ^ Rodriguez, Amanda. “Introduction.” Video Vixens, 19 Mar. 2015, Video Vixens | How the Hip Hop Music Video Industry Created a Means for Female Empowerment (wordpress.com)
  28. ^ Balaji, M. “Vixen Resistin’: Redefining Black Womanhood in Hip-Hop Music Videos.” Journal of Black Studies, vol. 41, no. 1, 2010, p. 20. EBSCOhost, search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=swh&AN=62648&site=ehost-live.
  29. ^ Overstreet, N. M., Rosenthal, L., Godfrey, C.-J., Brown, B. E., Khukhlovich, A., & Albritton, T. (2023). Navigating sexual stereotypes across time, space, and place: Exploring Black women’s practices of resistance, refusal, and reclamation. Stigma and Health, 8(3), 289–298. doi:10.1037/sah0000438
  30. ^ Reeves, Kowacie. “What Does the Negative Portrayal of Black Women in Hip-Hop Music Imply?” Medium, Black Community, 13 Dec. 2015, What Does The Negative Portrayal Of Black Women In The Hip-Hop Music Industry Imply? | by Kowacie Reeves | Black Community | Medium
  31. ^ a b Balaji, Murali (2008). "Vixen Resistin': Redefining Black Womanhood in Hip Hop Music Videos". Journal of Black Studies. 41 (1) (published 2010): 5–20. doi:10.1177/0021934708325377. PMID 21117275. S2CID 26320847.
  32. ^ Ward, L.Monique, et al. “Media Use and Black Emerging Adults’ Acceptance of Jezebel and Sapphire Stereotypes.” Journal of Media Psychology: Theories, Methods, and Applications, vol. 35, no. 5, 2023, pp. 256–67. EBSCOhost, doi:10.1027/1864-1105/a000390.
  33. ^ Neal-Barnett, Angela. “To Be Female, Anxious and Black.” Anxiety and Depression Association of America, ADAA, ADAA, 23 Apr. 2018, To Be Female, Anxious and Black | Anxiety and Depression Association of America, ADAA
  34. ^ Jerald, M. C., Cole, E. R., Ward, L. M., & Avery, L. R. (2017). Controlling images: How awareness of group stereotypes affects Black women’s well-being. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 64(5), 487–499. doi:10.1037/cou0000233
  35. ^ a b December 11; Arts, 2016 | Faatimah Solomon |; culture; Feminism; Media; Race/Ethnicity. "The Exploitation Of Women Of Color In Music Videos Needs To End - Women's Media Center". womensmediacenter.com. Retrieved October 31, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  36. ^ a b c d e f Heller, Nicole (2020). "Black Female Artists Reclaiming Their Sexual Power". Student Publications.
  37. ^ Oliver, Mary Beth; Raney, Arthur A.; Bryant, Jennings (June 26, 2019). Media Effects: Advances in Theory and Research. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-95701-7.
  38. ^ Norris, Mary (May 30, 2019). "Female Trouble: The Debate Over "Woman" as an Adjective". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  39. ^ a b Pough, Gwendolyn D. (2007). "What It Do, Shorty?: Women, Hip-Hop, and a Feminist Agenda". Black Women, Gender + Families. 1 (2): 78–99. JSTOR 10.5406/blacwomegendfami.1.2.0078.
  40. ^ Macarena Martin Martinez (November 2020), AFRO-CARIBBEAN WOMEN RECLAIMING THEIR BODIES AND SEXUALITY: NICKI MINAJ AND CARDI B’S AMBIVALENT SELF-PORTRAYALS.
  41. ^ Emerson, Rana A. (2002). "'Where My Girls At?': Negotiating Black Womanhood in Music Videos". Gender and Society. 16 (1): 115–135. doi:10.1177/0891243202016001007. JSTOR 3081879. S2CID 35432829.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Hip hop models at Wikimedia Commons

video, vixen, movie, video, vixens, video, vixen, also, referred, honey, video, girl, woman, models, appears, oriented, music, videos, from, 1990s, early, 2010s, video, vixen, image, staple, popular, music, particularly, within, genre, video, vixen, first, cam. For the movie see Video Vixens A video vixen also referred to as a hip hop honey or video girl 2 is a woman who models and appears in hip hop oriented music videos 3 4 From the 1990s to the early 2010s the video vixen image was a staple in popular music particularly within the genre of hip hop 5 The video vixen first came around in the late 1980s when the hip hop culture began to emerge into its own lifestyle although was most popular in American popular culture during the 1990s and 2000s 6 Many video vixens are aspiring actors singers dancers or professional models 7 Artists and vixens have been criticized for allegedly contributing to the social degradation of black women 8 3 9 Latinas are also degraded and hyper sexualized in hip hop music videos because they are seen as objects of sexual desire in rap music videos 10 The rapper Nicki Minaj in concert In her early career Minaj was often described as a video vixen 1 Contents 1 Origin of the video vixen 2 Social aspect 3 The video vixens effect on Black women 4 Female rappers as video vixens 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksOrigin of the video vixen editThe video vixen is believed to have arrived around the late 80s when hip hop was starting to take over as its own genre in the music industry 6 At this time women were used to create sex appeal in music videos while still being in the background It wasn t until the late 1990s when the women came to the center of many videos 6 The concept of the video vixen is seen to derive from the historical Jezebel stereotype that is typically placed upon black women The term jezebel is used in reference to a hyper sexual woman she often is someone who is depicted as sexually promiscuous and uses her body to get what she wants 11 3 The video vixen is believed to be the modernization of the Jezebel stereotype 8 According to Meagan Ford it is an opportunity for women to use their features and sexuality in order to create wealth 8 The vixens were there to enhance the male artist s persona of having a lot of money and women available to them at any time 6 The women not only had to please the directors and artists but the audience as well This concept sold because the males wanted to see that and the girls wanted to be that 12 This statement is made by music video director Dr Teeth who in the documentary also mentions how these women had the curves she had the face and she looked like the chick that was around the way that you could get at 12 Social aspect editThe work of video vixens and their portrayal in music videos have drawn criticism Meagan Ford Stephanie Stevenson Kate Conrad Travis Dixon and Yuanyuan Zhang express concern on how video vixens are placed in subordinate and submissive roles while often depicted as sexual objects 8 3 9 13 These authors believe that these depictions place male artists in positions of power which they say contribute to the representation of males as the dominant gender Models are depicted as sexual objects Signs of male power and the use of derogatory language towards women such as bitch and slut by artists contributes to the narrative that women are the inferior sex 14 15 16 In 2004 Nelly s video for his song Tip Drill came under particular criticism for its depiction and sexual objectification of women 17 18 While some people pointed out that the women who appeared in Nelly s video voluntarily chose to participate 19 others insisted that male rappers continue to sexually objectify hip hop models 13 while denying that the hip hop artists career is at least in part based on the exploitation of other people 20 In 2005 former hip hop music video model Karrine Steffans authored the book Confessions of a Video Vixen in which she depicts the degradation of women in the world of hip hop The book s publisher describes it as part tell all part cautionary tale 21 The book went on to be a best seller in the US 22 Karrine Steffans was one of a few women who decided to share her personal experience as a vixen with the world Her book was set as the standard vixen experience by society because it was believed to confirm people s speculations about the industry 23 Steffans is just one example of a vixen however and because of this vixens such as Gloria Velez and Melyssa Ford had a problem with her book They explained how their experience was not the same as hers and how she was essentially a nobody until the book was released Her referencing other vixens was seen as an act of forcing her narrative onto their experience 12 Another hip hop model Candace Smith said in an XXL interview what I ve seen on hip hop music video sets is complete degradation 24 The video vixens effect on Black women editIn the world of music videos the representation of black women as video vixens has been a complex and evolving narrative deeply intertwined with societal perceptions and historical contexts Historically black women have faced distinct challenges within the industry where their portrayal often reinforced negative stereotypes or hypersexualized images These portrayals frequently depict black women in roles that emphasize exaggerated sexuality submissiveness or aggression aligning with historical stereotypes deeply rooted in societal prejudices 25 These misrepresentations create a narrow and limited view of black femininity painting black women as objects of desire or as individuals solely defined by their physical attributes 26 These portrayals also set unrealistic beauty ideals and narrow standards often emphasizing physical attributes over other qualities leading to the marginalization and erasure of the multifaceted identities of black women 27 Such portrayals not only diminish the diverse identities and experiences of black women but also contribute to the normalization of these damaging stereotypes within broader popular culture 28 This influence extends beyond the entertainment industry affecting how black women are perceived and valued in society 29 The overemphasis on hypersexualized images of black women in music videos not only shapes perceptions within the black community but also impacts wider societal perceptions contributing to the reinforcement of harmful stereotypes and limiting opportunities for nuanced representations 30 31 By consistently showcasing black women in these narrowly defined roles music videos often perpetuate the objectification of black women impacting societal perceptions and perpetuating misconceptions about their character worth and agency 32 Consequently these representations can negatively impact the self perception and self worth of black women as they navigate societal expectations and confront the pressure to conform to narrowly defined beauty and behavioral norms perpetuated by these portrayals in music videos 33 34 The topic of video vixens has created a lot of debate on the representation of Black women such as author Faatimah Soloman s argument that it has contributed to the hyper sexualization of black women She explains in her article The Exploitation Of Women Of Color In Music Videos Needs To End how black women are deemed sexual beings due to their physical features Video vixens are believed to be the reinforcement of these negative stereotypes placed upon black women They are often referred to as stereotypical tropes because of their glamorization of embodying the stereotypes typically placed on women of color 35 She expands her argument by mentioning how these stereotypes lead to exclusion of Black women in relation to their social and intellectual contributions often because they are only praised for their bodies 35 This idea also correlates with Nicole Heller s explanation of Objectification theory and one dimensional womanhood These theories define the portrayal of black women in hip hop as it aims to separate the female body from her personality in order to focus on just her body 36 Heller mentions how Nelly swiping a card through the rear end of a vixen in his Tip Drill music video visually represents the ideology of the Black woman s body being a commodity 36 8 The subculture of the video vixen represents black women and women of color as objects that can literally be bought with a credit card instead of human beings Author Amanda Rodriguez however does mention how these women were considered to be a luxury commodity 11 This means that the artists and labels gave them a glamorized experience in return for their work It was temporary for most but for the vixens who became famous they truly were able to get paid like the artist 12 The video vixen is criticized for having a negative effect on women as they are believed to set unrealistic beauty standards and could have created the need to change themselves in order to fit said standards 11 Black women in hip hop music videos are often portrayed as the jezebel stereotype but presenting them as light skinned and thinner 37 Female rappers as video vixens editWomen or female rappers such as Lil Kim and Trina got criticized by T Denean Sharpley Whiting who called them a peculiar place of cultural antipathy 1 38 Female rappers who have shown themselves off as video vixens include Nicki Minaj Trina Eve Rasheeda Foxy Brown Remy Ma Da Brat Jacki O Shawnna Gangsta Boo LoLa Monroe Diamond from the hip hop group Crime Mob and many others 39 On the other hand these artists use their bodies and sexuality to reclaim their own individuality and self For instance Minaj talks about how she is aware of her position as a black woman female rapper and she is outspoken when it comes to empowering herself and other women She also uses her body with the intent of dominating over the male expression of female sexuality and she talks about how it s Barbie bitch has become her catchphrase to assert herself and her existence 1 36 Author Nicole Heller uses Nicki Minaj s Anaconda music video 2014 as an example of how female artists are reclaiming their sexualities and power Anaconda is a song that seeks to embrace large behinds and curvy bodies 36 Minaj samples Sir Mix A Lot s Baby Got Back with the intent of transforming the objectification of the female body and how curvy women specifically are objectified in the hip hop industry She uses her body in order to establish her dominance and portray how she is in full control of her body and sexuality 36 Other artists of Afro Caribbean origins like Cardi B alongside Nicki Minaj as well are analyzed to be using this hyper sexual image as a way to assert their own existence and self representation as Afro Caribbean women who are sexy yet worthy of freedom and it counters what could be oppressive norms that fit the respectability politics 40 In parallel to that the role of women in the hip hop world wasn t limited to only being video vixens Two artists in the early era of hip hop rapper Roxanne Shante and rap group Salt N Pepa were well known for rapping about defending the image of women 39 They were responding to male hip hop artists who habitually degraded women Other artists such as Missy Elliott Lauryn Hill Erykah Badu and Queen Latifah advocated being strong independent black women 41 Moreover according to Heller they asserted their sexuality without being in a position of hyper sexuality themselves 36 Penn State PhD student Murali Balaji quoted a 1984 essay from American writer and activist Audre Lorde in connection to black girls who are considered video vixens If I didn t define myself for myself I would be crunched into other people s fantasies for me and eaten alive 31 See also editMisogyny in hip hop culture Mami hip hop Sexuality in music videos Stereotypes of African Americans Empowerment Women s empowerment Hip Hop Black women in the American music industry List of models in music videos IntersectionalityReferences edit a b c Aun Qi Koh September 1 2012 It s Barbie bitch In Defense of Nicki Minaj Black Female Rappers and Hip hop Feminism Political Beanie Archived from the original on November 25 2018 self published source Shalit Wendy 2007 Girls Gone Mild Young Women Reclaim Self Respect and Find It s Not Bad to Be Good New York Random House p 72 ISBN 978 1 4000 6473 1 girls of color have a whole aspect of hip hop with those horrible videos and the rise of the hip hop honey or video girl a b c d Stevenson Stephanie 2010 Scholarship and Empowerment in the Age of the Video Vixen Promoting Black Adolescent Females Academic Success The University of Maryland McNair Scholars Undergraduate Research Journal 2 269 286 hdl 1903 10728 Fitts Mako 2008 Drop It like It s Hot Culture Industry Laborers and Their Perspectives on Rap Music Video Production Meridians 8 1 211 235 doi 10 2979 MER 2008 8 1 211 JSTOR 40338918 S2CID 197654934 Story Kaila A Performing Venus From Hottentot to Video Vixen Home Girls Make Some Noise Hip hop Feminism Anthology By Gwendolyn D Pough Mark Anthony Neal and Joan Morgan Mira Loma CA Parker Pub 2007 N pag Print a b c d White Brooklyn August 28 2019 The Evolution of Hip Hop s Video Vixen Okayplayer Sharpley Whiting T Denean Pimps up Ho s down Hip Hop s Hold on Young Black Women New York New York University Press 2007 p 26 ISBN 978 0 8147 4014 9 a b c d e Ford Meagan Dawnavette 2009 Modern day Jezebel A social critique on Confessions of a Video Vixen by Karrine Steffans using Patricia Hill Collins Black feminist theory Thesis ProQuest 304896050 a b Conrad Kate Dixon Travis Zhang Yuanyuan 2009 Controversial Rap Themes Gender Portrayals and Skin Tone Distortion A Content Analysis of Rap Music Videos Journal of Broadcasting amp Electronic Media 53 1 134 156 doi 10 1080 08838150802643795 S2CID 51858666 Rivera R February 7 2003 New York Ricans from the Hip Hop Zone Springer p 121 ISBN 978 1 4039 8167 7 a b c Rodriguez Amanda March 19 2015 Implications Negative and Positive Video Vixens a b c d Full Length How Video Models Changed The Music Industry VIXEN retrieved October 31 2022 a b Stange Mary Zeiss Carol K Oyster Jane Sloan Encyclopedia of Women in Today s World Thousand Oaks Calif Sage Reference 2011 p 695 ISBN 978 1 4129 7685 5 Hall Ann C Mardia J Bishop Pop Porn Pornography in American Culture Westport Conn Praeger 2007 p 8 ISBN 978 0 275 99920 9 Jeffries Michael P Thug Life Race Gender and the Meaning of Hip Hop Chicago University of Chicago Press 2011 p 155 ISBN 978 0 226 39584 5 Keyes Cheryl Lynette Rap Music and Street Consciousness Urbana University of Illinois Press 2002 p 220 ISBN 978 0 252 02761 1 Nelly feels the heat The Chicago Tribune April 2 2005 accessed October 1 2011 Arce Rose March 3 2005 Hip hop portrayal of women protested CNN Black college women take aim at rappers USA Today AP April 23 2004 Archived from the original on July 14 2004 Retrieved September 25 2023 Rose Tricia The Hip Hop Wars What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop And Why It Matters New York BasicCivitas 2008 p 177 ISBN 978 0 465 00897 1 Steffans Karrine 2005 Confessions of a Video Vixen HarperCollins Archived from the original on December 12 2005 Retrieved September 25 2023 Best Sellers Hardcover Nonfiction The New York Times July 24 2005 Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Ladel Lewis The Portrayal of African American Women in Hip Hop Videos ScholarWorks at WMU Salaam Khalid 2006 Eye Candy Tastes Like Candace XXL Magazine Harris Publications Archived from the original on January 17 2006 Retrieved September 25 2023 Matthews Annalycia D Hyper Sexualization of Black Women in the Media 2018 Gender amp Sexuality Studies Student Work Collection 22 https digitalcommons tacoma uw edu gender studies 22 Broadnax Jamie O Objectification of women in rap music videos Winter 2019 Rodriguez Amanda Introduction Video Vixens 19 Mar 2015 Video Vixens How the Hip Hop Music Video Industry Created a Means for Female Empowerment wordpress com Balaji M Vixen Resistin Redefining Black Womanhood in Hip Hop Music Videos Journal of Black Studies vol 41 no 1 2010 p 20 EBSCOhost search ebscohost com login aspx direct true amp db swh amp AN 62648 amp site ehost live Overstreet N M Rosenthal L Godfrey C J Brown B E Khukhlovich A amp Albritton T 2023 Navigating sexual stereotypes across time space and place Exploring Black women s practices of resistance refusal and reclamation Stigma and Health 8 3 289 298 doi 10 1037 sah0000438 Reeves Kowacie What Does the Negative Portrayal of Black Women in Hip Hop Music Imply Medium Black Community 13 Dec 2015 What Does The Negative Portrayal Of Black Women In The Hip Hop Music Industry Imply by Kowacie Reeves Black Community Medium a b Balaji Murali 2008 Vixen Resistin Redefining Black Womanhood in Hip Hop Music Videos Journal of Black Studies 41 1 published 2010 5 20 doi 10 1177 0021934708325377 PMID 21117275 S2CID 26320847 Ward L Monique et al Media Use and Black Emerging Adults Acceptance of Jezebel and Sapphire Stereotypes Journal of Media Psychology Theories Methods and Applications vol 35 no 5 2023 pp 256 67 EBSCOhost doi 10 1027 1864 1105 a000390 Neal Barnett Angela To Be Female Anxious and Black Anxiety and Depression Association of America ADAA ADAA 23 Apr 2018 To Be Female Anxious and Black Anxiety and Depression Association of America ADAA Jerald M C Cole E R Ward L M amp Avery L R 2017 Controlling images How awareness of group stereotypes affects Black women s well being Journal of Counseling Psychology 64 5 487 499 doi 10 1037 cou0000233 a b December 11 Arts 2016 Faatimah Solomon culture Feminism Media Race Ethnicity The Exploitation Of Women Of Color In Music Videos Needs To End Women s Media Center womensmediacenter com Retrieved October 31 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e f Heller Nicole 2020 Black Female Artists Reclaiming Their Sexual Power Student Publications Oliver Mary Beth Raney Arthur A Bryant Jennings June 26 2019 Media Effects Advances in Theory and Research Routledge ISBN 978 0 429 95701 7 Norris Mary May 30 2019 Female Trouble The Debate Over Woman as an Adjective The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Retrieved February 29 2024 a b Pough Gwendolyn D 2007 What It Do Shorty Women Hip Hop and a Feminist Agenda Black Women Gender Families 1 2 78 99 JSTOR 10 5406 blacwomegendfami 1 2 0078 Macarena Martin Martinez November 2020 AFRO CARIBBEAN WOMEN RECLAIMING THEIR BODIES AND SEXUALITY NICKI MINAJ AND CARDI B S AMBIVALENT SELF PORTRAYALS Emerson Rana A 2002 Where My Girls At Negotiating Black Womanhood in Music Videos Gender and Society 16 1 115 135 doi 10 1177 0891243202016001007 JSTOR 3081879 S2CID 35432829 Further reading editThompson Bonsu and Huang Howard August 4 2004 Eye Candy Hall of Fame XXL Magazine New York Harris Publications Retrieved on February 11 2006 External links edit nbsp Media related to Hip hop models at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Video vixen amp oldid 1217746088, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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