Preview

Paying The Dues Savan Summary

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
372 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Paying The Dues Savan Summary
In “What’s Black, Then White, and Said All Over?” Savan traces common “pop talk” that has its origins in African American vernacular. Savan’s article also discussed about “Paying the dues.” Now what “paying the dues” means may have many different significances, but what I think it mean is quite evident based on the passage. This would have been unthinkable once. Even fifteen or twenty years ago, car makers were loath to show black people in commercials for fear that their product would be tainted as inferior or, worse, as “a black car.” So it is not all bad, this commercialization of black talk, especially if it can get to the auto industry to move from shunning to quoting African American. The media stealing the black culture just to create

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Within William G. Roy's passage ‘‘Race records’’ and ‘‘hillbilly music’’: institutional origins of racial categories in the American commercial recording industry, Roy explores the relationship between cultural segregation and race and how they are deeply intertwined and are reciprocal relationships. Roy utilizes a plethora of rhetorical devices to showcase how homology among societal structures creates racial segregation in music and in turn how racial segregation also parallels the societal structures. Roy argues that the early music industry of America has created a great divide amongst races in America through the use of marketing ploys; making relatable music genres to the differing social structures at the time. However…

    • 263 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Negro is given a man’s chance in the commercial world, and in nothing is this Exposition more…

    • 374 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ar 670-1 - Essay 1

    • 648 Words
    • 3 Pages

    There are many army regulations dealing with the army but the one that I am going to talk about today is army regulation 670-1. What is army regulation 670-1 covering in the United states army? Army Regulation 670-1 deals with the wear and appearance of military uniforms for my paper I will recite the way a person is supposed to wear their uniform in army text and then tell you what it means in my own words. Starting with the parts that deals with the reason I am writing this report right now.…

    • 648 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    There are three theories behind the question of television packages being done primarily on African Americans who are from the ghetto. 1) The "pull yourself up by your bootstraps concept in embedded in conservative ideology. Most conservatives believe that the reason so many African Americans live in poverty is primarily due to a lack of motivation and a willingness to work hard. This way of thinking downplays discrimination, racism and prejudice as factors in why so many African Americans live below the poverty level. Featuring successful African Americans supports the belief that this can be done and these celebrities are the…

    • 258 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Leslie Savan

    • 402 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In Leslie Savan’s essay “What’s Black, Then White, and Said All Over?”, Savan writes about the importance of African American vernacular in the United States today. Black English has ultimately changed society with new terms and slangs. For instance, such slangs as “yo, what’s hanging, chill out, hook up, ain’t, ight ” and many more, have been adapted in day-to-day conversations, songs, magazines, and television causing a tremendous change in marketing. Although black slang has positively affected many companies by reaching out to young audiences through advertisements, not every commercial was pleasing to the crowd. The website www.wwnorton.com mentions a certain example. A man by the name of Sylvester Brown Jr. from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, talks about a certain commercial he saw on television a few years back that was trying to reach out to the African American audience. When Brown saw a car commercial showing a group of young blacks dancing to the “Electric Slide” while a car drove by, he recalled asking himself “What does the Electric Slide have to do with cars?”. Commercials such as these seem to draw consumers away instead of reeling them in. Another case has been with the new 2010 Toyota commercial. On the website www.theurbandaily.com , writers angrily talk about how many viewers were offended by the new Toyota rap commercial and how it was mocking black slang. To many people in the audience, the commercial seemed to have “killed” the term “Swagger”. Many advertisers do not seem to take in consideration that certain approaches using black slang can be condescending and disrespectful to African Americans, causing their company to lose clients. Throughout Savan’s essay, she constantly refers back to the importance of the African American vernacular and how it has exceedingly caused a positive change in marketing, but what Savan forgets to mention is that not all media-related advertisements using black slang have had…

    • 402 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Whether it is a story about love,talent,competition, or anything that pits individuals against each other. It perpetuates an invalid representation of our society. The media has a strong influence on what we think, how we think, and why we think certain things. It has subconsciously changed the mindset of individuals. Intelligent women are casted aside for women that portray themselves as ignorant. Individuals who may otherwise be strong, and sensible display irrational behavior. Take for example a rather “famous” scene from Bad Girls Club where one female black cast member gets up in the middle of night and proceeds to make an obscene amount of noise only to spite the rest of her housemates. She proceeds to bang on pans throughout the whole housing screaming “I did not get no sleep cause of yall, so yall aint going to sleep because of me”. This gives off the idea that this woman who otherwise maybe a friendly and incredible person is a vulgar, disrespectful, and inconsiderate. However she may not truly be the type of person she is portraying. By giving this image of herself she doesn’t only hurt her image, however the image of all African American women. Kristen Warner, speaks on how the word “ratchet” has become a part of our everyday vernacular, which is use predominantly to the behavior of some black women or the actions of anyone. Some would say…

    • 1346 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Leslie Savan’s Essay

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In Leslie Savan’s essay, “What’s Black, Then White, and Said All Over?,” Savan talks about the “hidden costs”(381) and benefits of the black language in America. When observing this economic and psychological boundary its clear that African American people went through lots of pain and suffering when creating trendy words and sayings. This is important to African Americans because most people do not understand that these words have now been adopted by white people “who reap the profits without paying [their] dues”(Savan 382).…

    • 810 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Colfax, J David. gThe Perpetuation of Racial Stereotypes: Blacks in Mass Circulation Magazines Advertisements h. Public Opinion Quarterly Fall 1965-1970`: 9-18.…

    • 1450 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The portrayal of black women remains a representation of how people see them; treat them and how they observe themselves. From how they wear their hair, how they look, how they dress, their assets, skin color and ethnicity, they are being picked apart from things that serve no importance of how a black woman should be respected. In the article, “Mentoring and Mothering Black Femininity in the Academy: An Exploration of Body, Voice, and Image through Black Female Characters” by Devair and Rhonda Jeffries it examines the social construction of the identity of black women in the media. For example, most of what we see on the media is never accurate about black women; it is used to tear a community down because of the past racial attitudes. The article says, “A pressing issue is the lack of Black women’s voice and presence in both media productions’ illustra¬tion of them and the scholarship about them. Therefore, much of what is consumed by mainstream culture is a skewed, caricatured perception of Black women created by those outside o f their demographic”. (127). I believe the past has significance in the present about how black women are perceived in the media since it continues to put exclusion on black women and we continue to not stand up for how we should be characterized therefore, our identity becomes invisible to the…

    • 2507 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Since the rise of technology, advertising is becoming more and more prominent. Television, computers, tablets, and smart phones are all modern mechanisms in which advertisers use to promulgate their products. Most advertizing companies select a target audience with their ads. In most cases advertisers use a “cool” approach in their ads to market to teenagers; since they have become large-scale consumers. Leslie Savan, an author, delves into this trend of marketing to teenagers in her excerpt, What 's Black, Then White, and Said All Over? She explains how advertising has adapted to using black vernacular to attract a young or a 'wannabe cool ' crowd. Savan states, “Since at least the early nineties, with hip-hop an entrenched, virtually mainstream hit, wannabe has been far more likely to refer to whites, especially teenagers, who want to be black or do the style” (370). By the early nineties black slang had become in-style. Black vernacular was no longer looked down upon, but…

    • 1910 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the 1930’s even white women are still considered to have more power than any African American. “Listen, N*****,” she says when Crooks finally tells her to get out, “You know what I can do to you if you open your trap?” (Steinbeck 80) She goes on further to antagonize him and he submits to her. Crooks is forced to relinquish any self-esteem he had to ensure that his job and furthermore his life, is not in danger. If at any time a black person makes a snide comment or tries to stand up for them self, punishment is inevitable. Repercussions include job loss or even death.…

    • 451 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Uncle Ben

    • 401 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Even though as a population, we have progressed and have broken down many social barriers, I feel like the entertainment industry still shows African Americans in the same fashion: gangsters, robbers, simpleminded folks, or people strictly with a “ghetto” or “black” mentality. They do not see African Americans as complicated characters with many layers of emotions. We are also seen in one light, and this is why many people still do not understand the African American population. The public portrays them as the same. This attitude hinders individuality and creativity. I would offer closure to this issue, by asking Hollywood to stop typecasting blacks into…

    • 401 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “In the eyes of white Americans, being black encapsulates your identity.” In reading and researching the African American cultural group, this quote seemed to identify exactly the way the race continues to still be treated today after many injustices in the past. It is astonishing to me that African Americans can still stand to be treated differently in today’s society.…

    • 897 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Bergman Homework

    • 405 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Starr and Waterman suggest that the popularity of Minstrelsy can be understood as more than a projection of white racism and that “working-class white youth expressed their own sense of marginalization through an identification with African American cultural forms (Starr/Waterman 2007, p.19).” In addition, it was during the Minstrel era that “the most pernicious stereotypes of black people,” including “the big-city knife toting dandy (the “bad negro”) - became enduring images in mainstream American culture, disseminated by an emerging entertainment industry and patronized by a predominantly white mass audience.” (Starr/Waterman 2007, p.21).…

    • 405 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fact of Blackness

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages

    My response to this article was an eye opener. After Fanon got away from the huge mind boggling words, I kind of felt for an extremely short second what it actually felt to be a black man. I myself am a unique mixture of races and I was fortunate to have grown up in such a way that I experienced my two main cultures vividly. I can laugh with George Lopez, and feel the pain, anguish, and laughter that are associated with a Mexican American heritage. The same goes for Larry the Cable Guy, I can laugh at what he says in his stand comedy routine, because I can relate with my Anglo culture. Going back to how Fanon explains his anguish of being labeled, it's understandable, I've been there, but unlike Fanon, I learned to how to run with racial comments. However, I'm not black and cannot relate to his culture, or how bad for his time it must have been for an average black male.…

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays