Cloaked in 5 college degrees an associates, a bachelors, 2 masters and a doctorate degree, I told my predominately white students that I would never give any one such as Don Imus permission to affect, taint or offend my self concept or self-worth as a human being. I told my students that if a person does not play a significant role in my life that includes loving me or paying my bills; their opinion does not matter to me. A white male student said, I respect you Dr. Sturges, but I disagree with you. He went on to explain that prior to the Jewish Holocaust the media desensitized the public's perception of Jewish people by publishing derogatory cartoons and commentaries in their mainstream media. The media laid the psychological foundation that opened the channels to physical abuse. Once the public no longer saw the Jewish people as human beings worthy of equal respect; this made it easy and justified Germany's position to kill, abuse, and destroy the lives of millions of Jewish people.
I am so angry with my student for telling me this. I am so angry with him for taking off my academic cloaks and exposing that little black girl who always hated herself. I thought my degrees could insulate me from being black in America and especially quiet the little black girl who asked her daddy to paint her white when she was five years old. This request brought my father to tears. My daddy asked me, "Why don't you want to look like the people in this world who love you the most?" I told my daddy that nobody like black people.
I am so devastated that my student's comment unveiled, the shame that I had tucked away while being the only black student in an anthropology class watching a documentary about an African tribe while the white male students made fun of the appearance of the breasts of the women in the tribe, stating how disgusting and unattractive they were. Their breasts looked like mine. I put my head down between my folded arms on my desk and sobbed. I will never forget this day.
The dominant Hip Hop culture did not lay the foundation for Don Imus' statement of "nappy headed hos"; the dominant Hip Hop culture is the physical manifestation of self-hatred among black people that stems from post traumatic slave syndrome. What was unique about African American slavery is not the physical abuse of the enslaved people; but the psychological destruction of their native language, cultural beliefs, traditions and heritage. It is through language that we define ourselves. Africans were forced to use a language that denigrated them and declared them to be property and partially human. Even the "N" word that many rappers use originated from slavery. Don Imus is not imitating the dominant collective consciousness of Hip Hop Culture; Hip Hop culture is imitating the collective consciousness of the white oppressor that is symbolic in Don Imus.
The word nappy is a very loaded word. Prior to being shipped to America during slavery blacks did not view their own hair texture as nappy in its natural state. The term nappy implies that the "normal" or correct texture of hair is straight or curly. Moreover, this term was used to compare the hair texture of bi-racial children of the slave master to those of African descent. The slave masters children were given preferential treatment and told that they were more intelligent and attractive because of their genetic connections with the dominant European white ethnicity.
I would like for everyone to imagine that they are white. Now I want you to imagine that all of your world leaders are black. Imagine that superman and all of your super heroes are black. I want you to imagine that the very first time that you learn about European culture outside of your immediate family and community you are on a slave ship. I want you to imagine that the only time that you discuss European history is once a month out of the year. Do you think that you would be who you are today?
I think that what is most dangerous about Don Imus's comment about the Rutger's Women Basketball team is not whether or not they heard it, but the long term ripple effect on the hearts and souls of the other people who are listening and how this shapes their perceptions and expectations of black women in general. As for the dominant Hip Hop culture, my question to society is-Do you think that Hip Hop culture is reflective of a psychologically healthy group of people who respect, love and honor themselves or is Hip Hop reflective of a people who are hurting with self-hatred?
Published by Cassandra George Sturges Psy.D
Author, psychology professor. View profile
- History of Hip-Hop in America and Punk-Rock in BritainHip-Hop and Punk-Rock both started as counter cultures to go against the oppressive societies in which these people lived in.
- Holy Hip Hop SitesHoly Hip Hop has been called a lot of things --Urban, dirty, corny, rap-light, unspiritual, unsanctified, gospel rap, Jesus music. None of the things that Holy Hip Hop has been called encapsulates its essence.
- Documentary Ponders Hip-Hop Culture--
- Top 10 Rap/Hip Hop Songs of 2009top 10 songs of 2009, best songs of 2009, top 10 rap songs of 2009, top 10 hip hop songs of 2009
Pop Stars Embrace Rising Hip-Hop NationHip-Hop has a stylistic trend of flashiness that appeals to teenagers who pledge allegiance to the popular culture. College and high-school students perceive it as a sort of pa...
- The State of Hip-Hop
- Hip-Hop Vs. America
- NYC Activities: Hip-Hop Tours
- Jigga What? - The Impact of Hip-Hop Culture on Today's Youth
- GlobalGrind.com Attempts to Meet the Needs of the Hip-Hop Culture
- Rock the Bells Keeps Hip-Hop Culture Alive: The Pharcyde, a Tribe Called Quest and...
- The Cell Phone Watch is the Latest Hip-Hop Trend for Morons

4 Comments
Post a CommentInteresting article....
Check out my commentary....God Father of Soul Speaks through Don Imus....
None of us exist in a bubble. We are all genetically, socially, emotionally and psychologically connected to our ancestors. The predominant African American culture is based on slavery because their culture, language, heritage, and family traditions were deleted during slavery. The self-concept for many African Americans trying to adapt to dominant American culture is that of self-hatred. Please Note: African Americans are only 12.5% of the US population but make up over 50% of prisoners, statistically, there are more African Americans in special education than than there are in regular education; the African American infant mortality rate is the same as those in 3rd world contries. What most people don't understand is that for every Hip Hop artist who earns millions, they are perpetuating a system that puts millions of blacks behind bars and in graves. Please read the book, "How to Make a Slave" then you will see why it is in the best interest of corporate of American to fund Hip Hop
Sorry for writing so fast. I wish that I could delete the errors in the comment below.
This would make more sense to me if they weren't basing their fame and money and weren't proud of this. Don Imus wasn't imitating white people, white "oppressors" don't say that anymore, the rappers he imitated do, proudly, and they make money for it