Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black person here. First, I hate the term "cultural misappropration" - that the hell is that all about.
Now for my two cents. If your child's black friends are not in the habit of engaging in "hip hop" dress and speech then your son will come accross like a total idiot and will likely be ridiculed. If however, the opposite is true he is probably ok. Basically, its all about context. If your son is not smart enough to figure out when and where it is appropriate to go "gangsta" then that is what you should help him with.
OP here. So you are a little hostile in this post which basically confirms what I am afraid of.
Yes, he's engaging in speech and dress similar to some of his friends, but they are African American and he's not. No, he's not an idiot. I see what you mean -- if he's a white kid in Potomac going around doing this, he would look stupid. But we live in Silver Spring, where there are plenty of African American kids who do this too but plenty who don't.
Cultural misappropriation is a perfectly reasonable term here, I think. In fact, it is the whole question -- is he appropriating things from a culture not his own and inadvertently offending the members of that culture? Or is hip hop universal enough that people won't be offended?
Op, it was not my intention to be hostile. If I came accross as a bit flippant it becasue I think your question is a bit of a no brainer. Behavior is all about context. Its perfectly ok for your child to be as hip hop as he wants to be if he is with a close groups of friends who behave in a similar fashion (and yes, this includes using the workd nigger). This behaviour, however, may not be ok in school or when addressing an unfamiliar group. In the black community (at least mine) we call this code switching - its an amazing life skill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black person here. First, I hate the term "cultural misappropration" - that the hell is that all about.
Now for my two cents. If your child's black friends are not in the habit of engaging in "hip hop" dress and speech then your son will come accross like a total idiot and will likely be ridiculed. If however, the opposite is true he is probably ok. Basically, its all about context. If your son is not smart enough to figure out when and where it is appropriate to go "gangsta" then that is what you should help him with.
OP here. So you are a little hostile in this post which basically confirms what I am afraid of.
Yes, he's engaging in speech and dress similar to some of his friends, but they are African American and he's not. No, he's not an idiot. I see what you mean -- if he's a white kid in Potomac going around doing this, he would look stupid. But we live in Silver Spring, where there are plenty of African American kids who do this too but plenty who don't.
Cultural misappropriation is a perfectly reasonable term here, I think. In fact, it is the whole question -- is he appropriating things from a culture not his own and inadvertently offending the members of that culture? Or is hip hop universal enough that people won't be offended?
Anonymous wrote:Black person here. First, I hate the term "cultural misappropration" - that the hell is that all about.
Now for my two cents. If your child's black friends are not in the habit of engaging in "hip hop" dress and speech then your son will come accross like a total idiot and will likely be ridiculed. If however, the opposite is true he is probably ok. Basically, its all about context. If your son is not smart enough to figure out when and where it is appropriate to go "gangsta" then that is what you should help him with.
Anonymous wrote:Black person here. First, I hate the term "cultural misappropration" - that the hell is that all about.
Now for my two cents. If your child's black friends are not in the habit of engaging in "hip hop" dress and speech then your son will come accross like a total idiot and will likely be ridiculed. If however, the opposite is true he is probably ok. Basically, its all about context. If your son is not smart enough to figure out when and where it is appropriate to go "gangsta" then that is what you should help him with.
Anonymous wrote:So this is only a question I could comfortably ask in an anonymous forum.
My middle school DS, who is white, loves hip hop and wants to emulate hip hop culture dress and speech. There are a lot of limits I'm comfortable placing on this in terms of appropriate dress at school, language, etc.
However, one thing he does is kind of adopt a "hip hop" way of speaking. This is fine, except that he also has many African American friends and what he's doing sometimes sounds like mimicking a stereotype of African Americans. I know this is not what he means to do but I want to be able to explain to him that this might be viewed as disrespectful or stereotyping and maybe he shouldn't do it.
But is that reasonable? Or am I being ridiculous?