thebeave
Contributor
Huh. I was always told that diversity and multiculturalism is a positive for society. Sounds like it has a tendency to create animosity, division and resentment instead. Oh well, it was a nice thought anyway.
I understand the OP in the sense that it is trying to make a particular distinction. I don't agree that it actually succeeds in making that distinction.
Maybe I'm looking at this in too simplistic a fashion, but it seems to me that the problem with cultural appropriation is the appropriation bit - treating someone else's culture as if it were your own. It's a problem that is particularly prevalent in the US, where the native culture there makes a number of unfortunate culture assumptions - that all the world works on the same the principles and values and can be judged and evaluated according to those values, and that symbols are a tremendously important part of what they represent. Add that to the typical rich country problem of being able to afford mass transport and enabling mass appropriation in a way that can swamp the origin culture, and you have a potential problem, and may offend people.
But the problem is not the fact of person A using symbols or items native to another culture, since there's a great deal of positive that can come from that. The problem is the manner in which they are doing it. People in the US getting excited about Peruvian history and the Nazca lines is a good thing. Combining that with American Mysticism and UFO culture is probably harmless, at least to the Peruvians. Travelling to Peru en masse and ensuring that any local guide that doesn't indulge in US-style UFO theories can't keep their business, is more of a problem. But again, it's the manner of cultural interaction, not the fact of it.
What I don't have much patience with is the idea that certain symbols and practices somehow 'belong' to particular sub-cultures within America - particular hairstyles, particular icons, particular clothing - and that people who aren't of that culture are somehow not entitled to use them. Because that is cultural appropriation, and of a particularly nasty and virulent kind.
Where did I say that? Where has anyone said that?I suppose I understand what the author intended to say, but don't agree. What's wrong with engaging in practises of another culture as a commodity or "incorrectly"? Sometimes, that kind of appreciation creates a completely new and interesting mix that's worthy in its own right.
^^THIS^^ To expand on it, the OP wrongly presumes that culture is a stable thing and that their definitive boundaries of who and what is within and outside each culture. Every "culture" is fluid, fuzzy, changing, and practiced in highly variable ways. Only with top-down oppressive authoritarian control is it otherwise. Ei
IOW, appropriation is inherent to the culture. IT is analogous to genetic variation. Some of it is good, some bad, most neutral, but in the aggregate it is a positive thing and vital to cultural evolution.
Where does the OP presume that culture is a stable thing?
It is presumed by the entire notion that variations from normative manifestations of culture are "incorrect ways".
Why "must" it mean "That they are outside the culture?"Since there is no other referent, incorrect must mean they are outside of culture,rather than just the inherent variance and instability that is part of culture.
It's not about ownership but origination.The reality is that so-called "incorrect" variations happen all the time by people within a culture but are often viewed positively or ignored, and not attacked as incorrect or appropriations, unless the person doing it is presumed a different race from those presumed to "own" that cultural practice manifestation, etc..
I understand the OP in the sense that it is trying to make a particular distinction. I don't agree that it actually succeeds in making that distinction.
Maybe I'm looking at this in too simplistic a fashion, but it seems to me that the problem with cultural appropriation is the appropriation bit - treating someone else's culture as if it were your own. It's a problem that is particularly prevalent in the US, where the native culture there makes a number of unfortunate culture assumptions - that all the world works on the same the principles and values and can be judged and evaluated according to those values, and that symbols are a tremendously important part of what they represent. Add that to the typical rich country problem of being able to afford mass transport and enabling mass appropriation in a way that can swamp the origin culture, and you have a potential problem, and may offend people.
But the problem is not the fact of person A using symbols or items native to another culture, since there's a great deal of positive that can come from that. The problem is the manner in which they are doing it. People in the US getting excited about Peruvian history and the Nazca lines is a good thing. Combining that with American Mysticism and UFO culture is probably harmless, at least to the Peruvians. Travelling to Peru en masse and ensuring that any local guide that doesn't indulge in US-style UFO theories can't keep their business, is more of a problem. But again, it's the manner of cultural interaction, not the fact of it.
What I don't have much patience with is the idea that certain symbols and practices somehow 'belong' to particular sub-cultures within America - particular hairstyles, particular icons, particular clothing - and that people who aren't of that culture are somehow not entitled to use them. Because that is cultural appropriation, and of a particularly nasty and virulent kind.
But at the same time, the origination of these hairstyles, icons, and clothing inside a certain culture is a big part of what makes these hairstyles, icons, and clothing tempting to other cultures. Fans of a cultural product will say that it's not enough that an artifact is pretty or fully functioning but it much also be "authentic."
This whole concept of "cultural appropriation" strikes me as similar to that of the "sacred". If I think aboriginal beads look cool and decide to wear them and they come into fashion, and I have no appreciation of native heritage, I see nothing wrong with that. Same as if I decide to draw a cartoon including Mohammed or eat pork in the presence of a jew. I wouldn't do it for the sole purpose of upsetting them, but I woudln't refrain from doing it just to please them. If I want to sing blues music and wear a poncho, I will.
I still have unanswered questions, so I'll repost them.
Who decides who is an insider and an outsider to a culture? What makes AB think she is a hip-hop "insider" and IA a hip-hop "outsider"?
Please note you don't have to answer for AB. Answer for yourself. Who is a hip-hop insider, and who is an outsider?
Hi, AA.
I didn't notice this thread until just a couple hours ago because it's title was not particularly provocative. In general Athena, when someone indicates that they have issues with what you have said, a productive path includes responding to their questions. A non productive path involves repeating yourself over and over again as if the other person were refusing to read your words or deliberately misinterpreting them. I'm sorry I didn't explain to you SPECIFICALLY what I found to be confusing, contradictory, and ambiguous about your comment in the other thread and I'm sorry that that distressed you enough to start this thread.
But, surely there has been enough discussion in this thread about people who have issues with your definitions for you to see that they are not beyond scrutiny.
The cultures decide. But you knew that.
As for who is and is not inside hip-hop culture, there is and has been lively debate on that subject for years and if you are truly interested, the google works wonders. But I doubt you really are interested. If you were, you wouldn't ask the question. You would already know.
Not asking if you agree or disagree,
do you understand it?
"Traditional to another group of people"
"Both sides".
How do you define a culture and how do you decide who's the outsider?
I was raised a Catholic and my entire family is Catholic. What if I used the symbols of Catholicism, not as respect or because I liked the aesthetic, but as parody or criticism of Catholicism? Am I safe from the accusation of 'cultural appropriation'? Isn't the using of the symbols in a hurtful way what's wrong, not that I do, or do not, belong to the culture?
What if I use something not in a way that's mutually beneficial, and not out of 'respect' or 'deference' but because I like the way something looks?
No I am not.You are begging the question.
Ask an anthropologist. Ask a hip-hop artist. GOOGLE THE WORDS HIP-HOP CULTURE!How do I know who is inside a culture so that I know that their decision represents the culture's decision?
Not everyone considers her outside the culture and those who do should be the ones to answer that question. If I were to hazard a guess, I would say it is because her accusers believe she hasn't lived the life those who originated the music, style, and general composition of what is called hip-hop culture have lived. She doesn't share those experiences. Hip hop comes out of the experience of growing up black in America, growing up poor in america, and being fucked over because you were not white and/or financially secure and/or willing to buy into a blinding belief in right and righteousness of Leave It to Beaver. IA is seen as someone who hasn't paid her dues, she is seen as a prepackaged Barbie suitable to be sold to a white-bread public. She is today's Pat Boone.I suggest you google 'begging the question' since you're so fond of telling me to google things.
As for who is and is not inside hip-hop culture, there is and has been lively debate on that subject for years and if you are truly interested, the google works wonders. But I doubt you really are interested. If you were, you wouldn't ask the question. You would already know.
I knew you wouldn't answer. I asked a specific question: why is IA considered an 'outsider' to hip hop culture,
Not everyone buys that she is all that either. AB loves calling all kinds of people fake and and all kinds of people love calling her fake in return. The "who is fake" and "who is the real deal" arguments are probably the longest running thread in the history of hip-hop. But again, you would know this already is Hip-Hop really interested you.and AB an 'insider'?
If you don't know why, feel free to admit it.
I don't know why, either.

If you were, you wouldn't ask the question. You would already know.
Not everyone considers her outside the culture and those who do should be the ones to answer that question. If I were to hazard a guess, I would say it is because her accusers believe she hasn't lived the life those who originated the music, style, and general composition of what is called hip-hop culture have lived. She doesn't share those experiences. Hip hop comes out of the experience of growing up black in America, growing up poor in america, and being fucked over because you were not white and/or financially secure and/or willing to buy into a blinding belief in right and righteousness of Leave It to Beaver. IA is seen as someone who hasn't paid her dues, she is seen as a prepackaged Barbie suitable to be sold to a white-bread public. She is today's Pat Boone.
That is to say, If I were to hazard a guess.
If you don't know why either, then how could you possibly know any answer given to you is the truth? Surely you must have some idea.
But then again, this ain't about hip-hop or azaleas, now is it?
BTW, why not compare IA to Eminem?
Wouldn't that be a better comparison if what you are going for is who is and is not in the CULTURE? unless that's not what you are going for at all.
Sometimes, questions are asked to springboard a debate, not because the answers are not known.
Not everyone considers her outside the culture and those who do should be the ones to answer that question. If I were to hazard a guess, I would say it is because her accusers believe she hasn't lived the life those who originated the music, style, and general composition of what is called hip-hop culture have lived. She doesn't share those experiences. Hip hop comes out of the experience of growing up black in America, growing up poor in america, and being fucked over because you were not white and/or financially secure and/or willing to buy into a blinding belief in right and righteousness of Leave It to Beaver. IA is seen as someone who hasn't paid her dues, she is seen as a prepackaged Barbie suitable to be sold to a white-bread public. She is today's Pat Boone.
That is to say, If I were to hazard a guess.
Since it is an ontological impossibility for IA to have grown up black in America, that means she can't ever pay her dues, she can't ever be part of hip-hop culture, no matter what she contributes to it. Okay, good to know.
If you don't know why either, then how could you possibly know any answer given to you is the truth? Surely you must have some idea.
But then again, this ain't about hip-hop or azaleas, now is it?
BTW, why not compare IA to Eminem?
Wouldn't that be a better comparison if what you are going for is who is and is not in the CULTURE? unless that's not what you are going for at all.
Why would it be a better comparison? Is it because Eminem is definitely a hip-hop insider in a much less ambiguous way than AB? Since Eminem did not grow up black in America, it seems to me that growing up black in America can't be a criterion for belonging to hip-hop culture.
Or is it just that those with nonblack skin can still overcome their exclusion if they are far more talented than the average hip-hop musician?
This reminds me of your grandmother telling you you'd have to work twice as hard because you're a girl, and twice as hard again because you're black, just to be treated on par.
That strikes me as unfair, and something that should be discouraged -- giving people with different skin colours different and harder hurdles for the same reward.
So black people are being unfair to the white girl and that's unfair. It's RACIST!!
The creation, the INDUSTRY that is IA, is based on her race (It sure ain't her talent). That is what has made her popular. And she has proven herself to be down with that. She plays on that. Her whole shtick is "Look at me! See what a cool white girl I am! Buy my stuff and you can be cool and still be white too. All the affectations with none of the discrimination!"