Well, that was black.
Cornbread and collard greens black. âHot sauce in my bagâ black. Southern black. Dirty South black. Your grandma telling you to go cut down a switch black.
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Did you know Beyoncé was black?
If you didnât know, if you thought she was some ethereal, raceless, colorless transformative nymph who could doo-wop pop whatever you projected upon her, then you found out you were wrong on Saturday, Feb. 6, 2016, when âFormation (Dirty)â dropped.
âBut I donât like âratchetâ trap BeyoncĂ©,â says someone, somewhere who wishes sheâd go back to singing âSingle Ladiesâ or âIrreplaceable.â Someone who likes their booty-popping as far removed from Louisiana bounce as possible. Someone who canât handle all this blackness and just learned that the world âratchetâ was a pejorative, another way of saying âghetto.â Another way of saying something is black. Another way of calling you âhood,â âthugâ or ânâger.â
To that person I say, âYouâll be all right, because BeyoncĂ© doesnât belong to you.â
She belongs to herself, herself who apparently loves Red Lobster, the Jackson 5âs original noses and her baby girlâs Afro.
Whatâs the point of being in the game as long as she has and not being able to openly embrace your full self? Whatâs the point of having all the money in the world if you canât give back to those you love? Whatâs the point of creating art, but putting handcuffs on yourself because someone might not âgetâ it?
BeyoncĂ©âs not going to read your YouTube comment anyway. Sheâs too busy slaying.
Yes, she doesnât give many interviews. Yes, sheâs the only artist who could drop a surprise album/song/video and crash your mental hard drive with excellence. Yes, sheâs still popping and prancing in a onesie. Yes, being mysterious is an indelible part of her brand. Yes, she doesnât have to play the same game everyone else is playing. Yes, the traditional rules no longer apply (if youâre BeyoncĂ©).
Does this blackity-black thing BeyoncĂ© has createdâthe excellently crunk, Louisiana-dipped, Big Freedia-approved âFormationââmean BeyoncĂ© is political now? What if I told you that BeyoncĂ© was always political? Even when she was doo-wop popping in Destinyâs Child? What if I told you that to be black in a public space, with all eyes on you, and choosing carefully how to handle that spotlight is a form of politics, a negotiation between the self and the world that all black people must make? That even then, BeyoncĂ© was a) country, b) kind of a crappy interview, c) confident and d) black?
Now, was she quoting prominent feminists and saying âStop killing usâ in videos back then? No. But she was a child star who spent most of her life onstage, not in a Black Queer Studies class.
Much as Janet Jackson got increasingly political the further away she got from her toxic stage dad, BeyoncĂ© has done the same since ditching her father as her manager. Artists grow into themselves. We watch them develop. She doesnât have to play it pop-safe anymore, and this show hasnât been PG-13 since âDrunk in Loveâ dropped.
BeyoncĂ© is grown. She wants to have grown conversations with her audience. You canât get much more grown than talking about police brutality and gender studies. So letâs reciprocate and meet the Queen Bey on her level. Letâs get all that âconversationâ going that she alludes to in âFormation.â
âSo why now?â says someone still frustrated with this video. âWhy have police with their âhands upâ and a little black kid in a hoodie dancing? Why drown a cop car? Why have male booty-popping footage? Why is she giving the middle finger while dressed like a Creole witch? And what is a Creole? What is a Texas bama? And how can she be pro-black with a pro-black anthem if she has 10 pounds of blond weave on her head?â
Well, to answer those questions âŠ
1. No one knows exactly when BeyoncĂ© became âwoke.â Maybe she was always woke, but sheâs definitely âwokeâ now.
2. Because Trayvon Martin and Tamir Rice and countless others.
3. See above.
4. Because theyâre excellent at it.
5. That was specifically for you. Just you. She knows you and knew you would ask these questions.
6. Google is your friend.
7. She literally says what this is in the song.
8. Because black hair, while political, doesnât have to be. You can have a weave and be liberal, and you can have an Afro and be conservative. Itâs just hair, not the sum of your being.
Blackness is complex. In this video she points out all those complexities and how they exist in her, in all of us. I am bougie. My sisters are not. We were all raised in the same house by two people from the segregated Deep South who are college-educated and unapologetically black. They taught us to love our black skin, and we celebrated Black History Month.
I know what a fried bologna sandwich tastes like because it was my favorite food from age 4 until age 6. I prefer mustard and turnip greens over collards. I pledged a black sorority in college and havenât been active since never, but still have love for the Divine 9. I claim my momâs hometown of Newport, Ark., as much as I claim St. Louis, where I was born. Iâm not a member of the Bey Hive (in the â90s, I picked Mya over Bey because she could tap-dance ⊠make of that what you will), but I recognize greatness when I see it.
This video was greatness. Black woman greatness. Letâs write 10,000 think pieces about it and debate what it all means. I hope she performs âFormationâ at the Super Bowl and that Cam Newton dabs to it, creating âpeak blackness.â And I hope black people embrace it. After all, she made this for us.
Straight From
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