20
by Mr Graham_Archive
Being a longtime rap fan, this is an intriguing question for me (which will surely achieve resolution on an internet music-themed message board).
I will now offer up some anecdotal observations.
• During my time in NYC from 1981-1987 (lived in Harlem, went to school in East Harlem), I did not hear the n-word used by my grade- and middle-school peers (many/most of whom were black). It was a word I knew, & that I know others knew (how could we not?) but in hindsight, my impression is that the word was felt/known to be "bad." I can't say when that changed.
• In the late '90s, I was in Somerville (outlying sub-district of Boston LOL) & heard a white teenager utter the following in response to a passing driver who honked at him & his friends for being in the street: "Yo, chill out. Be natural, nigga."
• Chuck D (a rapper who I respect a great deal, despite certain differences in opinion over the years) has compared the n-word with "punk," saying that they're both words that you can't "reclaim" and make positive or at least less hurtful. Not sure I agree, but it's a valid entry to the discussion. (Note: in the black community, "punk" has been a slang term for "homosexual.")
• A friend of mine with black/white parentage says his parents dislike of Richard Pryor stems in large part to the fact that he brought the word back into the black vernacular.
• El-P, a white rapper, used the line as self-description on his first Company Flow 12" single. He has never used it since, & on the CD compilation of old Co-Flow tracks (released by Co-Flow's black DJ, Mr. Len), the word is blanked out.
• As a 34-year-old rap fan, a white person & someone who spent half my "growing up" years in NYC, I would never use the n-word about, with or to anyone I know, black or white (or myself). Not as in "you nigger" or as in "you my nigga." Just can't, just won't.
• I do enjoy racial comedy (vs. "racist" comedy), but I find it a fine line, & few walk it well. Most poeple I've heard that do, aren't in front of a microphone. Which isn't to say that it's a censorship thing or that it has to be done in secret -- but more to say that the average standup dude (or lady; paging a Miss Silverman) has less concern with refined comedic subtleties than with getting the big laughs. This is an area where a lengthy digression/exploration would fit; I'll leave that to someone with less work to do today.
• The whole Dude, it's just a word, what's the big deal, you need to chill out, it doesn't bother me if you call me "honky" "argument" is out the goddamn window pretty much across the board, but especially when voiced by middle class white guys (which it generally seems to be). Sorry, bros, it'll take more than the old sticks & stones gag to sort this out, & you're not helping by pretending to try.
• Check out "R&B" by Devin the Dude for a fun song.
Antero: I ain't messin wit no broke, broke!
Mr. Graham