I don’t think I realized how much of a black gender war there was over the “The Color Purple“ when it came out.
There are the same arguments you see online today: blacks gays versus straights, men versus women, the role of black male strength in the face of white supremacy, allegations of domestic violence and assault, oppression of black males and taking it out on black women, family, secrets, trauma Porn, and a whole host of repetitive issues that you would think were published in a movie from Lena Waithe two years ago
tunein.com
oh, they threw in a random Meg vs Tory Lanez hot take in the end
"Black men aren't defending black women" 
There are the same arguments you see online today: blacks gays versus straights, men versus women, the role of black male strength in the face of white supremacy, allegations of domestic violence and assault, oppression of black males and taking it out on black women, family, secrets, trauma Porn, and a whole host of repetitive issues that you would think were published in a movie from Lena Waithe two years ago

Revisiting 'The Color Purple' Wars
Listen to this episode and more from Up First from NPR on TuneIn. Criticism about representation and misrepresentation in film are nothing new. In this episode, Aisha Harris, co-host of the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast, traces the debates ignited by Steven Spielberg's 1985 film, "The Color...
oh, they threw in a random Meg vs Tory Lanez hot take in the end


Last edited: