Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Misogyny and Black Youth: Silence Equals Death
Bill Quigley
08 Apr 2009
🖨️ Print Article

The educator/journalist observed that some of the boys in her classroom were “bursting with perspective” on “the widespread use of the words ‘bitch’ and ‘ho’ to describe young women of color on campus.” Not so with the girls, who were largely silent on the subject. When pressed, some of the girls “claim the words are justifiably used to describe ‘bad girls’ who are promiscuous and unruly, not realizing that black women have always been deemed “bad” in the eyes of the dominant culture, as less than feminine, as bodies for pornographic exploitation.” There is a crying need to “change the self-hating mindset of many young black women,” made worse by “a generation of Bush-besotted militarism and corporate reign over media [that] has turned sexualized violence against women into a billion dollar industry.”

Misogyny and Black Youth: Silence Equals Death
by Sikivu Hutchinson
“My students slam other girls for being “hoochies” and sloganeer violent misogynist lyrics without a second thought.”
There is silence in the classroom.  Even amidst the clockwatching ten minutes-before-the-bell-rings clamor of a typical high school class there is silence, deafening and thick as quicksand. I have asked the class a question about the widespread use of the words “bitch” and “ho” to describe young women of color on campus and several boys are holding forth in response.  They are the same four opinionated boys who have been the most vocal throughout these sessions, always ready with a quip, a deflection or, sometimes, serious commentary that reveals deep wisdom.  They are bursting with perspective on this topic, but the girls in the room are silent.  Some twist in their seats, some study the tops of their desks in calculated boredom, transporting themselves outside of the room, slain by the language of dehumanization. 
Finally a few girls chime in and say they use the terms casually with friends, as in “my b or my h,” supposedly neutralizing their negative connotations akin to the way they use the word “nigga.”  Some claim the words are justifiably used to describe “bad girls” who are promiscuous and unruly, not realizing that black women have always been deemed “bad” in the eyes of the dominant culture, as less than feminine, as bodies for pornographic exploitation.  When I wondered aloud whether white women call themselves bitch as a term of endearment I got uncertain responses.  My guess is that they don’t, not because white women are necessarily more enlightened and self-aware than women of color on gender, but because white femininity is the beauty ideal and hence the human ideal.  Despite the misogyny that pervades American culture there is inherent value placed on the lives of white women.  Every aspect of the image industry affirms their existence, and the spectrum of culturally recognized white femininity extends from proper and pure to sexually liberated.
“Despite the misogyny that pervades American culture there is inherent value placed on the lives of white women.”
This is exemplified by the tabloid media’s obsession with missing white women and white girls.  Plastered on the main pages of websites like AOL, relentlessly rammed down our collective throats in titillating morsels with whiffs of sexuality and scandal, poster child Caylee Anderson and company are a metaphor for Middle America’s Little Red Riding Hood fetishization of white femininity.  Tabloid media narratives of imperiled white females highlight the suburban virtues of white Middle America and not so subtlely evoke the social pathologies of the so-called inner city. Indeed, the spectacles of grief, mourning, and community outrage trotted out on CNN and FOX not only program viewers to identify with the injustice that has been done to the victim and her family, but to her community. In the world of 24-7 media these victims become our girls, our daughters, while the “bs” and “hs” of the inner city symbolize the disorder and ungovernableness of an urban America whose values must be kept at bay.
“Awareness about the relationship between pervasive violence against black women in the media and male behavior is lacking.”
In many regards this is part of the same so-called post-feminist trend of telling women to sit down and shut up, to internalize the values of white supremacist capitalist patriarchy and stay in their place.  A generation of Bush-besotted militarism and corporate reign over media has turned sexualized violence against women into a billion dollar industry, as illustrated by global romance with gangsta rap, violent video games and Internet pornography.  Yet the desensitization of young black women to these trends is perhaps the most painful.  When I talk to my students about the staggering rates of sexual assault and intimate partner abuse in black communities they are quick to judge themselves and their peers for inciting male violence.  Unable to see themselves and their lives as valuable, they slam other girls for being “hoochies” and sloganeer violent misogynist lyrics without a second thought.  Awareness about the relationship between pervasive violence against black women in the media and male behavior is lacking.  During the 2008-2009 school year a few South L.A. schools have been willing to partner with media literacy organizations like the Women of Color Media Justice Initiative on a gender equity curriculum that trains young people to engage in media advocacy.  But unless we change the self-hating mindset of many young black women, silence—as the 1980s gay activist group ACT-UP’s saying goes—does equal death, as we are poised to lose another generation to a media-colonized sense of self worth.
Sikivu Hutchinson is the editor of blackfemlens.org, a commentator for KPFK 90.7 FM and co-founder of the Women of Color Media Justice Initiative, a partnership with the Los Angeles Commission on the Status of Women, the Ida B. Wells Institute, Mother’s Day Radio and the Women’s Leadership Project. She can be contacted at sikivu@blackfemlens.org
 

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Rohan Rice
    Britain’s Imperialist Maneuvers in Iran
    08 Apr 2026
    Keir Starmer and Trump are putting on a puppet show for the cameras. Behind the scenes, Britain remains a junior imperialist partner working for the destruction of Iran.
  • Black Alliance For Peace
    BAP’s 9th Anniversary: Turn Imperialist Wars into Peoples’ Wars Against Imperialism
    08 Apr 2026
    The Black Alliance for Peace marks nine years of fighting against U.S. imperialist brutality. Now the movement must transform imperialist wars into people's wars for liberation.
  • Erica Caines
    Dialectics, Iran and the Long Durée of Anticolonial Revolution
    08 Apr 2026
    The war on Iran is part of a class war against any country that refuses to open itself up for foreign profit. Understanding Iran means seeing its fight as part of the same struggle that defines the…
  • Adam Mahoney
    An Oil Explosion in a Black Texas Town Traces Back to Trump’s Iran and Venezuela Crises
    08 Apr 2026
    “The chickens have come home to roost,” one resident said. “Our exact fears have come true.”
  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio April 3, 2026
    03 Apr 2026
    In this week’s segment, we discuss the impact on the voting rights of Black people if the SAVE Act is signed into law. But we begin with a discussion of an historic vote at the United Nations which…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us