Either way, the assassination of women’s character, by way of rap music must stop, and to do that men and women alike must begin to project positive images of women into the media. Hip-hop listeners must stop supporting music degrading women to send the artists the message that cheapening women is not now, and should never be acceptable.
To begin, one of the many issues with hip-hop music is the way women are represented and how they are addressed. In the article, “Confronting and Changing Images and Representations of Black Womanhood in Rap Music”, Gwen Pough states that, “Much of the representing that goes on in hip-hop is men rappers representing black women (Pough 82). It is more common to see and hear black women being vulgarized than other races of women. Rappers often times refer to them with names that are unkind and derogatory. For example, soon after, Pough asserts that, Rappers most often refer to “black women as bitches, hoes, stunts, sleezers, hoochies, and chickenheads” (Pough 82). It is possible that harsh names like the ones Pough writes about and the oversexualization of