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Killer Mike Writes Powerful Op-Ed On The Stigma Of Negative Rap

Posted on December 1st, 2014
by
Staff Editor


Killer Mike has been extremely vocal ever since news broke that Officer Darren Wilson would not be indicted for killing Michael Brown back in August, and he is not stopping the fight for justice.

Teaming up with University of Richmond assistant professor Erik Nielson, the two wrote an op-ed for USA Today on the stigma of negativity in rap music today.

The piece is titled “Rap’s poetic (In)justice,” and “hones in on the recent case of Elonis v. U.S. — scheduled to hit the Supreme Court this month — in which 27-year-old Anthony Elonis was sentenced to 44 months in prison for posting a series of violent rap lyrics to Facebook under a psuedonym.”

See a brief excerpt from the piece below:

As recent research has revealed, rap lyrics have been introduced as evidence of a defendant’s criminal behavior in hundreds of cases nationwide, frequently leading to convictions that are based on prosecutors’ blatant mischaracterizations of the genre. Ignoring many of the elements that signal rap as form of artistic expression, such as rappers’ use of stage names or their frequent use of metaphor and hyperbole, prosecutors will present rap as literal autobiography. In effect, they ask jurors to suspend the distinction between author and narrator, reality and fiction, to secure guilty verdicts.

No other fictional form — musical, literary or cinematic — is used this way in the courts, a concerning double standard that research suggests is rooted, at least in part, in stereotypes about the people of color primarily associated with rap music, as well as the misconception that hip-hop and the artists behind it are dangerous.

In fact, the history of hip-hop tells a very different story. In its formative years, for example, it was explicitly conceived by many as an alternative to the violent gang culture that consumed cities like New York. Since then, it has offered countless young men and women opportunities to escape the poverty and violence in America’s urban centers. As rapper Ice T once put it, “If I hadn’t had a chance to rap, I’d either be dead or in jail.”

To read the rest, head over to USA Today.

2 responses to “Killer Mike Writes Powerful Op-Ed On The Stigma Of Negative Rap”

  1. Space Mack says:

    Thank god, they didn’t ask Young Thug.