Miley Cyrus and the issues of slut-shaming and racial condescension :deadmanny

Julius Skrrvin

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http://www.washingtonpost.com/enter...aee436-0e68-11e3-bdf6-e4fc677d94a1_story.html

Miley Cyrus is America’s worst nightmare. Last night, with her performance at the MTV Video Music Awards, she proved that many people in this country are still pre-occupied with slut-shaming and coded racial condescension in the context of entertainment.
Her performance of “We Can’t Stop,” a catchy and otherwise seemingly harmless pop song, that transitioned to a duet with Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines,” is clearly the most talked about moment of the show, but for all the wrong reasons.

Her bawdy performance, that featured Miley and other dancers twerking on stage, drew criticism as lewd, grotesque and shameful. MSNBC's Mika Brzezinski went so far as to say Cyrus “is obviously deeply troubled, deeply disturbed, clearly has confidence issues, probably eating disorder,” :heh: on Morning Joe Monday. But what exactly is so disturbing about Miley Cyrus?

It seems that we still can’t handle what it’s like for a young woman to be able to perform, as she chooses, without layering in a heavy helping of insults as well. While Cyrus was condemned for grinding on Thicke, very little criticism has been laid on the singer himself for his role in the performance. The nastiest of the comments have implied that Cyrus is somehow diseased because of her preferred dance methods.

Add to this the fact that some people feel she is appropriating a certain amount of black culture without proper license and you’ve got a cauldron of ignorance and discrimination that even in 2013 is widely regarded as understandable, if not sensible. It is not. :dead:

When the white, 20-year-old, former child star and daughter of a country singer goes on stage and does something that the so-called ruling classes deem unseemly, it starts a firestorm. When scores of young women across the globe take the stage to express themselves in exactly the same way at an EDM concert by Diplo, and plaster their exploits all over social networks, no one bats an eye.

By implying that Cyrus is somehow creating a minstrel act of sorts by including black dancers in her act, you are implying that there is something lesser than about such an act. As if it’s completely impossible that she simply enjoys and respects the talents of those she chooses to work with. In short, it is inherently racist to imply that there is anything wrong with anyone other than black women twerking.
:russ:
So, in 2013 in America, while we celebrate a young man from Seattle for having the courage to make a song out of exploring his thoughts on sexuality as a child, and eventually coming to the conclusion that hate is stupid, Miley doesn't get such a luxury. Even though all she's doing is precisely what we’re celebrating everyone else for: being herself.

:dead::deadmanny::deadrose:
 

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I think a lot of the outrage over Miley's new persona is that so much of the stuff she is embracing is urban. All this twerking and guesting on rap songs is driving White America batty because Hannah Montana is not supposed to fraternizing with the Negroes and their culture.

And I hate that bytch Mika Brzynzski more than any other white talking head skank on TV. She is an elitist c*nt with hardly one redeeming quality about her.
 

gho3st

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Imagine all the model cac daughters that are about to follow in Miley's footsteps...Thats what they are really mad about :heh:
 

theworldismine13

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The Real

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Yeah, it's not like saying you want to do something that "feels Black" and that you feel a connection with "the hood," and then surrounding yourself with Black entourage, dancers, and musicians while acting out outlandish stereotypes/the worst elements of "Black" culture while bearing none of the responsibility of Black life is racist at all, right? I mean, when Black people criticized minstrel shows, they were just jealous and didn't want white people to be able to sing and dance like them, right? In a way, Black people were the real oppressors all along, right? Right?
 

Elle Driver

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Yeah, it's not like saying you want to do something that "feels Black" and that you feel a connection with "the hood," and then surrounding yourself with Black entourage, dancers, and musicians while acting out outlandish stereotypes/the worst elements of "Black" culture while bearing none of the responsibility of Black life is racist at all, right? I mean, when Black people criticized minstrel shows, they were just jealous and didn't want white people to be able to sing and dance like them, right? In a way, Black people were the real oppressors all along, right? Right?

She basically accessorizes black people uses them as props to legitimize herself, whats worse is some Z list struggle rappers are co signing her because they need that shine. :snoop:
 
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