How We Partition Black Masculinity

Discussion in 'Group Discussions' started by Nick Delmacy, Sep 19, 2017.

  1. Nick Delmacy

    Nick Delmacy is a Verified MemberNick Delmacy Da Architect
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    How We Partition Black Masculinity

    Carefree black men have never been allowed to exist on their own terms. It’s time we let them.

    They’ll think I’m gay
    , Warren said. It was 2009, and he'd joined the high school varsity basketball team as a freshman. We were best friends and, naturally, I was happy for him. I was ready to be at every game and cheer him on, not realizing that his participation meant the end of our friendship. Warren's statement ricocheted in my head, growing louder: They’ll think I’m gay. They’ll think I’m gay. They’ll think I’m gay. This belief — one that is tethered to the projections of others and one I would again encounter — was based on a set of rules meant to discipline: men don’t put their hands on their hips; men don’t walk with a twitch; men don't act like women; men don't express vulnerability. In the moment — a mix of anger, disappointment, and confusion — all I could think was, Why?


    There is a partition to the black men we build. They are veiled in notions of hypermasculinity not of our making. It’s why black boys are prepared for battle at a young age; we know the world is no safe haven for them in the years ahead — and even more of a threat to black girls and women. Yet in doing so, we limit them from a land of possibility.

    For years now, I have gone about living my life as a carefree black man. Here, in this in-between space, there is a feminine delicacy assigned to my selfhood. It’s based on the way I dress and the way I talk, all southern drawl and careful enunciation. I'm a gay man. But not all carefree black men are, and what one decides to wear or how one decides to move throughout the world doesn’t have to say anything about their sexuality. Odell Beckham Jr. navigates this space. Jaden Smith does, too. As does Young Thug and Kanye West. To certain spectators, we are not always considered men, a label that has come to symbolize courage and emotional indestructibility. Instead we're viewed as oddities: flawed creatures who brim with emotion, wear atypical clothing, or, in Thug's case, call close friends “babe” and “lover.”

    Consider the curiosity Odell Beckham Jr. courts on the field. In some circles, the pro-footballer is better known for his hair and animated dance moves than he is for his stats as an all-star New York Giants wide receiver. In January, a compilation video of him dancing appeared on YouTube. Clips of his playful pirouettes, loose-hipped Whips and Nae Naes circulated across Twitter and Facebook timelines, spreading like wildfire. Every movement Odell made was scrutinized. Every action questioned. Like other men who wear their masculinity freely, he was thrust into the realm of suspect.

    Similarly, when Jaden Smith became the face of Louis Vuitton’s SS 2016 campaign in an exquisite skirt and mesh top, he was, again, deemed gay. This happens frequently: a man does something — anything — that diverts from the norm and is lambasted for it. In high school, depending on where you grew up, this might have been the black kid who wore his pants too tight. Or maybe there was a time you found a friend singing too loudly to Beyoncé’s “Flawless” and, even if only for a moment, doubted him. Lest we forget the time Kanye donned a Givenchy kilt and was publicly chided for it. Or when Drake spoke a bit too highly of Lil Wayne and was greeted with raised eyebrows. In March, critics condemned the affection actor Michael B. Jordan and director Ryan Coogler seemed to be showing for one another in an image from Vanity Fair.

    carefree-black-men.jpg
    Even just last week, on the occasion of FADER’s Summer Music cover — which depicts Rae Sremmurd’s Jxmmi resting on Swae Lee’s shoulder — the brothers were attacked for looking soft. “The goals of the media is to feminize black men,” leylathickfit wrote in the comments of an Instagram post by The Shade Room, referring to the cover image. Another Instagram user, motivation_needed_, said just a few lines below: “...the photo it looks feminine and they’re not females nor are they gay so why do they need to look feminine?” Chef cheeba added: “Y’all gay asf.” When our black men appear vulnerable, well mannered, or delicate, we dismiss them into a realm of questioned sexuality. We'd rather grind them into muscles and fervor, snatching them of expression and thought. By most categorizations, a prized man is typically strong and solid, a vision of comfort and sturdiness, the care-taker, the provider, but never free. This needs to stop.

    There were times when I wasn’t allowed to be free. The clearest memory I have of being caged came in 2011, two years after my friendship with Warren began to dissolve. I was 17 and had recently decided to not sign up for JROTC, the junior army program offered to students. I happily arrived home that day with a new schedule, forgoing military training — which, I was told, would be good for me — for an economics course, and decided to take a nap. Enraged with my decision and my condition, as it was then described, I was awakened from my sleep by my stepfather — he'd burned me with an iron.

    There is a line in Toni Morrison’s novel Song of Solomon that reads: “If you want to fly you have to give up the shit that weighs you down.” It is time we allow our men to fly. We limit them, we shape them, and place them in boxes we often despise. No longer can we trap men like Odell, Jaden, Thug, or two brothers from Tupelo, Mississippi who just want to make utopian rap music, in useless expectations of masculinity. The men we love, the boys we love; they’re dying — at the hands of police, private citizens, and individuals like Omar Mateen who use hate as a reason to kill. Who then are we to limit them in living their lives on their terms?

    Screen Shot 2017-09-18 at 9.37.06 PM.png

    It took Odell a fight on the field and a vicious helmet snatch to quiet those who challenged his masculinity. And who knows what it may take Jaden to get the world to reckon with his individuality, but shouldn’t we support him either way? It’s time we permitted the same carefreeness we do to those who are unbound by the limits of society to our black men and boys. It isn’t gay for any man to wear a dress, nor is it gay for a man to dance or bleach his hair. A man choosing to do his own thing, to slice through a sea of sameness, is nothing more than a bold stance of defiance, a claim of independence.

    I don’t want to suggest that freedom comes without consequence. Last June, the Huffington Post published a piece that critiqued the carefree black boy movement. The writer argued that freedom was allowed only to men who'd amassed wealth and fame. He believed that death, alongside ridicule, was a possibility for being a carefree black boy. And while this may be true, the political and social realities of blacks have remained largely unchanged since we first arrived in America. Racial terror may take on different forms, but it is terror all the same. As we witnessed this weekend at Pulse nightclub in Orlando, hundreds named and unnamed are murdered for simply being. At any point the system might kill us, and to suggest we should not make an attempt for freedom is equally limiting.

    We’ve asked our men to fight for us a million times in a million different ways. The only mantra we should now extend is a careful and courageous one: fly for us.


     
  2. DreG

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    Prince and Michael Jackson probably NEVER would have been able to get away with the shit they did (weird fashions and musical tastes) had they not validated it by being the two biggest stars.Like,had MJ not had the biggest selling album ever,there's no way he could have gotten away with being a young black dude who loved Gene Kelly and ballet. More figures like that,but who didn't have to jump over the moon to be weird ( i say that in the fondest way), would definitely be a good influence for younger black boys.
     
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  3. Champagne Papi

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    ....ankh niggas are behind this
     
  4. Cyrus-Brooks

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    There is so much to pick apart here I almost don't know where to begin. Let me start with the premise "How we partition black masculinity." The premise is faulty. Masculinity across every culture, not just black American culture is "partitioned" and always has been. Cultures across the world and for thousands of years have had rules both formal and informal about what it is to be masculine and what manhood is. Manhood had always been an exclusive club and the men of that culture have always decided who's in and who's out. Black masculinity is not an outlier in this. Traditionally before modern times boys had to prove themselves through some kind of rite of passage to be accepted as a man by society. It wasnt just an automatic thing. The author of this piece is either dishonest or uninformed about how manhood works.

    Another problem I have with this opinion piece was actually addressed by the Huffington Post article "What We Ignore When Talking About The #CarefreeBlackBoy Movement." What We Ignore When Talking About the #CarefreeBlackBoy Movement | HuffPost
    Black boys and men don't get to be "carefree." Like it or not we've never had that luxury and more than likely never will. Not for the foreseeable future anyway. Whether you accept it or not every black male in American society has a bullseye on his back. We got so much stacked against us and so many enemies being carefree in many environments and situations can get you serious legal trouble, maimed, or even killed. Out of any group of people black men and boys can't least afford to be seen as soft, weak, vulnerable, or even too emotional. Especially now in the neo-Confederate, neo-Nazi, Trump era. That's reality and to not prepare black boys for that harsh reality only does them a disservice. I'd even call it parental malpractice. So you can put on a dress if you want to just don't be surprised if you get your ass kicked and no one is sympathetic. Jaden Smith is rich and has a famous father and mother he can get away with that. Little Tyrone from around the way doesn't have that luxury and probably never will. It is what it is.
     
  5. Boaxy

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    I think what the issue is, people look at femininity in the black male unit, as a setback, or points taken away from someone.

    Life is already tough being black, add to the fact you like to wear makeup, dresses, and you're homosexual and a sissy? Like wow.

    I think one perfect example is The Blind Side story. It was adapted into a movie, but it's also based on real events.

    It's about a heavy set black young man who was abandoned by his family, and is taken in by this white teacher (Sandra Bullock), and her husband who is the high school football coach. They let him stay in their house, and treat him as their son in a sense.

    He has dreams of playing football, so they put him on the football team. They help him basically get scouted to play college football. He is later drafted into the NFL and wins the Super Bowl.

    Had that boy been a feminine sissy, and wanted to be a fashion designer, makeup artist, etc. and if he came out as a gay to them. They would have told him to get his gay ass out of their house. They would not support or put up with that shit. So it's sad.

    Being a gay black feminine man myself, I sadly understand.

    But what can you do. It's a tough argument to break or stomp on.
     
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