Women and popular culture: Pimp chic debate (independent) Updated: 2006-02-22 15:31 British Dame Anita Roddick
has attacked young female role models who think it is "cool to be a whore",
criticising stars such as Britney Spears and Beyoncé over the sexual imagery in
their videos.
Pimp used to be a dirty word. To be accused of dressing or acting like one
was an incontrovertible term of abuse. Now, however, it is the height of
fashion. At least to some.
"Pimp chic" has entered mainstream culture, with the music industry, luxury
shops, clothes designers and even airlines adopting symbols of the culture to
advertise their products.
Sharp-suited men with scowls, skimpily clad women looking up to them in awe,
flash cars and lots of bling may be nothing new when it comes to selling glamour
and "cool", but observers say they are becoming increasingly concerned about the
effect of marketing these images, especially to children.
Dame Anita Roddick, founder of The Body Shop, hit out yesterday at the trend.
She said: "A lot of people seem to think that it's cool to be a pimp or whore.
It's not cool. The reality is dark, evil and appalling and unregulated. The
reality is sex trafficking, which is about young women being forced into rooms
to have sex however many times a day so that the pimp can take all the money."
She added: "There are thousands of ads, mostly focused on women and young
girls, that say you are not attractive, you are not sexy, you are not
intelligent, unless you look like this. In kids' magazines there is a passivity
and a stupidity that is seen as a great way forward. Something has gone very
wrong."
Dame Anita criticised stars such as Beyoncé and Britney Spears for simulating
sex in their music videos, and highlighted the trend among some hip hop artists
to make porn films to be marketed alongside the graphic lyrics of their songs.
"What we have now is what I call "pimp and ho chic" with all aspects of the
sex industry presented as hip and cool," she said."Pole dancing as exercise,
lap-dancing clubs as places to see celebrities, fancy-dress balls and the
everyday use of the words "bitch" and "ho" to refer to women are just some of
the examples I have come across."
The film director Spike Lee has also hit out at pimp culture, using a lecture
at the University of Florida earlier this month to criticise rap stars such as
Snoop Dogg for glamorising prostitution at the same time as reinforcing
stereotypes about black men.
He said: "We are bombarded by these gangsta images again and again and again
and again ... they do make a difference to human behaviour. No one gets upset
any more that pimpdom gets elevated on a pedestal."
It is not just the music world that has embraced pimp chic with such fervour.
Richard Branson's airline Virgin Atlantic launched an advertising campaign for
its new Upper Class airport clubhouse last year that featured the slogan: "Pimp
My Lounge." The department store Selfridges ran prominent advertisements last
Christmas depicting a man in "pimp chic" clothes, holding a glass of champagne,
with two semi-naked women draped over him. Alongside the image, a strapline
read: "Get your Christmas booty."
Last week Madonna - no stranger to raunchy videos and suggestive choreography
- appeared on the MTV show Pimp My Ride, in which the DJ Tim Westwood turns
ordinary cars into bling-laden vehicles. And Hustle and Flow, a film about a
pimp who becomes a gangsta rapper, won a £9m distribution deal at the most
recent Sundance Film Festival - the biggest movie deal in the event's history.
Fashion has also embraced the trend, with labels such as Phat Pimp Clothing
in London and the "pimp" style of singers such as Andre 3000 from the band
Outkast being copied in the pages of glossy magazines. In his hit "Pimp Juice",
the rap star Nelly included lines about luxury labels such as Prada, Gucci and
Dolce e Gabbana.
Stacy Gillis, an expert in feminism at Newcastle University, believes that
"pimp and ho chic" stereotypes black men and objectifies women. She commented:
"It is about a white, middle class, Anglo-American culture which picks up on
little bits and pieces of another society and class but doesn't really engage
with it on a political level.
"There is a disenfranchised part of US society that does glamorise the pimp
and fetishises their power and that has transferred over here as well. But it is
grotesque in that we are talking about women who are extremely disenfranchised
and it is about the complete sexualisation of female identity."
Dr Gillis is particularly concerned about the way in which pimp chic is now
being marketed to children. The Playboy brand, for example, now has a
best-selling line of pink and black pencil cases, stationery and clothes which
the company says is aimed at teenagers, but which has proved to be even more
popular with primary school-age girls.
High-street stores such as WH Smith have come in for severe criticism for
selling the Playboy brand but have refused to stop doing so.
Dr Gillis said: "I have seen girls as young as four wearing boob tubes and
T-shirts with slogans like 'So many boys, so little time'. They look up to
people like Jordan and want a Playboy pencil case and watch a Beyoncé video. I
find it deeply disturbing that we are sexualising girls' bodies at such a young
age."
She added: "Pimp culture is part of the backlash against feminism, in which
'post feminism' is seen as being all about choice - that it's OK for me to get
my tits out because it's my choice and that makes me a feminist. Well, no, it
doesn't."
But is pimp culture really so bad? Jonathan Freeman, a lecturer in youth
culture and marketing at the Warwick Business School, believes not. "I don't
think the word pimp may have the same connotation for some young people and
children as it has for people like Anita Roddick," he said. "They do not imbue
it with the same malevolence, and if you look at something like the Virgin
Atlantic campaign, it could be viewed as a bit of fun that fits in with its
image and its name.
"I am not saying that it is right, but I think that different people will see
it in a different light.
"What will be interesting is if people like Anita Roddick make people look at
the culture in a different light and that makes the advertisers change tack."
Six women give their views
Alexia Loundras, music journalist and Mercury Prize judge
"There's no doubt that several successful male pop artists offer a less than
enlightened portrayal of women in their music, but it's wrong to suggest that it
is the whole picture. In the past few years there have been plenty of strong
female voices offering young women far more positive pop role models - artists
such as Ms Dynamite, Pink and Beyoncé's old group, Destiny's Child (they of the
hit single 'Independent Women').
"Ms Roddick is right to draw attention to the fact that 'pimp' is inching
towards becoming an accepted term for 'cool' (and it would've been nice if
Madonna had considered that). But young people today are not stupid - there is
simply no way that my 14-year-old sister would dream of thinking it was
fashionable to describe themselves as 'whores'."
Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, writer and broadcaster
"Anita Roddick is absolutely right to slam the pimp and whore culture,
promoted by big business and detestable icons - licentious pop stars, so called
rebels, black "pride" mercenaries and designer mobsters. They do it for money
and status, they slash and burn moral boundaries, distort and coarsen society.
Among black Britons it is destroying the parts racism couldn't reach or break.
Boys and men, some more susceptible because they are under-educated, are drawn
to mean, "cool" rap-star lifestyles - violent misanthropy, bling, drugs and
half-naked girls. Black-on-black violence is spreading, disrespect for females
endemic. Decent black men and women (those lucky and strong enough to retain a
sense of themselves) can only watch and weep as the future dissolves into
chaos."
Dawn Porter, author of Diaries of an Internet Lover (published by Virgin)
"I think the whole pimp culture thing has been taken out of context. Women
like Beyoncé look fabulous. They may be bumping and grinding on their videos but
hundreds of thousands of young girls admire them, not because they want to be
prostitutes with a pimp, but because they are expressing themselves in the way
that they want.
"I think the critics are blowing it out of proportion. I don't like seeing
small girls walking down the street with tight tops and midriffs showing, but
that is nothing new - I did it when I was younger. It's about dressing up for
young girls, while for women it should be about having the freedom to dress how
we want.
"As far as I am concerned, until we have exposed genitalia on a music video,
there isn't a problem."
Max Akhtar, MTV presenter
"Beyoncé has talent. It is easy to pick on people who are successful, but she
is young, a single woman and a multimillionaire - and that is inspirational. I
see people like Mary J Blige and Beyoncé as role models.
"Rap music is still led by men. There's one Missy Elliot to every five Kanye
Wests. Alicia Keys went from being a tomboy to wearing a negligee. When I asked
her about the change in image, she said she felt she had reached the point in
her career when no one could accuse her of being sexy to sell records.
"If I'm interviewing someone and choose to wear a skirt and heels, or jeans
and a hoodie, I still know my stuff. Women already have to work harder to prove
that it is not their face or their image that lets them be successful."
Caroline Coon, artist and founder of Cunst Art: Feminist Performance Art
"There is an issue about 'whore culture' but the way women have to confront
it is by firstly acknowledging it is already illegal to buy sex from anybody
under 18. People over the age of 18 should have the choice to do what they like
with their bodies, and be as sexually explicit as they like - even for money.
What culture has to do is overtly celebrate women who are sexual. The real
problem is what male culture gives itself permission to do. How despicable of
men to think that if a woman is sexual, she can be labelled a whore, men can do
whatever they want with her, denigrate her, rape her, even murder her, and then
excuse themselves.
"I valourise women who are overtly sexual and want to question women and men
who are critical of women's sexual behaviour."
Joan Smith, columnist
"I do think Anita Roddick is right to raise this issue. Something which
started in the 1970s as part of the sexual liberation of women has been hijacked
and turned into something which is now simply part of the sex industry. I am
shocked at how prevalent this culture is - from MTV to magazines like Nuts and
Loaded, which convey something that is not nudity, but a particular version of
male fantasies. Sex has been industrialised, through people-trafficking and
prostitution. Young women are treated as commodities. And it is not acceptable
to put some kind of jokey spin on this. Gangsta rap music comes from people who
live in a violent society and in response adopt a macho identity. But it is
wrong that something that comes out of a ghetto culture is celebrated without
any understanding of its origins."
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