Abstract: Hip Hop Feminism in the 21st Century

Hip-hop feminism differs from traditional feminism and black feminism. It’s a way of thinking and living that is rooted in different life experiences than the traditional feminism of the Women’s Liberation Movement or black feminism from the Civil Rights Movement. Although hip hop feminism shares similarities with black feminism, it has its own distinct identity in that the ideology was born out of a need to understand the many cultural, social and political conditions that women (born after 1965) of the hip-hop generation faced.

These women weren’t dealing directly with issues of invisibility brought on by systems of segregation, for example. Rather, they were battling extreme visibility within the media and its negative stereotyping. Although hip hop is considered disempowering to black women and merely reproducing dominant racist and sexist images of black women, there are many Black female entertainers who attempt to challenge and undermine such representations. And they prove that despite its limitations, this realm of cultural representation and performance can in fact be emancipatory for black women.

Drawing from the twenty-first century hip-hop feminist framework, this study examines where hip-hop culture and feminist thought and activism intersect and hip-hop feminism’s ability to empower and inspire young Black women. Specifically, artists Nicki Minaj and Beyoncé will be utilized to explore the ways in which Black female entertainers produce feminist knowledge and empowerment within the realms of hip hop culture.

By examining song lyrics by Nicki Minaj and Beyoncé, the discussions surrounding music videos along with the work of contemporary women authors, this essay opens the door for further dialogue about what hip-hop feminism might add to current conversations surrounding race, class, gender, and sexuality and hip-hop’s power to liberate black women.