African-American Culture

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The majority of people living in today’s world have started to picture African-Americans in a certain light. These people have tended to categorize African-Americans along stereotypical lines. Many of these people believe that African-Americans and their culture are defined by the recently created genres of music, Rap and Hip-hop, whose songs endorse “thug-life” which primarily promote money, drug-use, and sex. Numerous African-American youths have started incorporating variations the N-word popularized by these new songs, like “niggah” or “nigga,” into their speech as a playful term of endearment when speaking with other African-Americans, but some members of the other ethnicities have chosen to adopt the term in an ignorant attempt to feel …show more content…

Advocates of the modern adaptations of the N-word say that the use of these terms empowers African-Americans by allowing them to tweak the definition of the word that was responsible for great pains it had brought to their ancestors, but as a result many unfortunate African-Americans youths who are being raised without a proper education or parenting can grow up unaware of the true meaning of such a harsh word; they see and hear how popular culture and Hip-hop portray the stereotypical African-American and in an attempt to replicate how society thinks they should function, they “act the part” and casually toss the N-word around in conversations which slowly traps them into filling the stereotypes set forth by non-African-American …show more content…

The New York Amsterdam News published an article, “Teens debate city’s symbolic ban on the ‘n-word’,” containing the thoughts of African-American teenagers who have faced such pressures. One teenager, named Kuamel Stuart, thoughtfully explained that, “when you have parents using the word with such liberation, it definitely encourages the kids to use the word. When there are so many Black parents in a concentrated area, the parents say the word, the kids say the word, and they also hear other parents in the immediate environment using the word, it definitely perpetuates the cycle. There's people that say, "We changed the definition of the word, we changed the spelling." I don't necessarily agree with that. Then, you have the others who frankly don't really care. That's due to ignorance, due to being uneducated about the history of the word. I don't use the word. I believe in being an example” (Stuart). Kuamel is a great example of the potential pressure one can feel to conform when everyone around them carelessly throws that word around. Fortunately, he had the willpower to resist falling in line with the rest of his community because he firmly believes that the word shouldn’t be used

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