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References
Armstead, R. (2007). ‘Growing the size of black woman’: Feminist activism in Havana hip hop. NWSA Journal, 19(1), 106-117.
Gourdine, R. M. , Lemmons, B. P. (2011). Perceptions of misogyny in hip hop and rap: What do the youths think? Journal of Human Behavior In the Social Environment, 21(1), 57-72.
Kistler, M.E., Lee, M. J. (2010). Does exposure to sexual hip-hop music videos influence the sexual attitudes of college students? Mass Communication and Society, 13(1), 67-86.
Monk-Turner, E. , Kouts, T., Parris K., Webb, C. (2007). Gender role stereotyping in advertisements on three radio stations: Does musical genre make a difference? Journal of Gender Studies, 16(2), 173-182.
Morgan, J. (1999) When chickenheads come home to roost: My life as a hip-hop feminist. 240.
Morgan, M. (2005). Hip-hop women shredding the veil: Race and class in popular feminist identity. South Atlantic Quarterly, 104(3), 425-444.
Reid-Brinkley, S. R. (2008). The essence of res(ex)pectability: Black women’s negotiation of black femininity in rap music & music video. Meridians: Feminism, Race Transitionalism,8(1),236-260.
Ross, J.N., Coleman, N.M. (2011). Gold digger or video girl: The salience of an emerging hip-hop sexual script. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 13(2), 157-171.
Stephens, D., Few, A. (2007). Hip hop honey or video ho: African American preadolescents’ understanding of female sexual scripts in hip hop culture. Sexuality & Culture, 11(4), 48-69.
Stephens, D.P., Phillips, L.D. (2003). Freaks, gold diggers, divas, & dykes: The African American women’s sexual scripts.
Stokes, C. E. (2007). Representin’ in cyberspace: Sexual scripts, self-definition, and hip hop culture in black American adolescent girls’ home pages. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 9(2), 169-184.
Sweetland, J.J (2002). Unexpected but authentic use of an ethnically-marked dialect. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 6(4), 514-538.
Tarpley, N. (1995). Testimony: Young African Americans on self-discovery and black identity. 272.
Thompson, L. (2007). Pimps up, ho’s down: Hip hop’s hold on young black women. 187
Tyree, T. M. (2009). Lovin momma and hatin’ on baby mama: A comparison of misogynistic & stereotypical representation in songs about rapper’ mothers and baby mamas. Women and Language, 32(2), 50-58.
To view the entire annotated bibliography click here.
For instructions on writing a reference list click here.
Gourdine, R. M. , Lemmons, B. P. (2011). Perceptions of misogyny in hip hop and rap: What do the youths think? Journal of Human Behavior In the Social Environment, 21(1), 57-72.
Kistler, M.E., Lee, M. J. (2010). Does exposure to sexual hip-hop music videos influence the sexual attitudes of college students? Mass Communication and Society, 13(1), 67-86.
Monk-Turner, E. , Kouts, T., Parris K., Webb, C. (2007). Gender role stereotyping in advertisements on three radio stations: Does musical genre make a difference? Journal of Gender Studies, 16(2), 173-182.
Morgan, J. (1999) When chickenheads come home to roost: My life as a hip-hop feminist. 240.
Morgan, M. (2005). Hip-hop women shredding the veil: Race and class in popular feminist identity. South Atlantic Quarterly, 104(3), 425-444.
Reid-Brinkley, S. R. (2008). The essence of res(ex)pectability: Black women’s negotiation of black femininity in rap music & music video. Meridians: Feminism, Race Transitionalism,8(1),236-260.
Ross, J.N., Coleman, N.M. (2011). Gold digger or video girl: The salience of an emerging hip-hop sexual script. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 13(2), 157-171.
Stephens, D., Few, A. (2007). Hip hop honey or video ho: African American preadolescents’ understanding of female sexual scripts in hip hop culture. Sexuality & Culture, 11(4), 48-69.
Stephens, D.P., Phillips, L.D. (2003). Freaks, gold diggers, divas, & dykes: The African American women’s sexual scripts.
Stokes, C. E. (2007). Representin’ in cyberspace: Sexual scripts, self-definition, and hip hop culture in black American adolescent girls’ home pages. Culture, Health & Sexuality, 9(2), 169-184.
Sweetland, J.J (2002). Unexpected but authentic use of an ethnically-marked dialect. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 6(4), 514-538.
Tarpley, N. (1995). Testimony: Young African Americans on self-discovery and black identity. 272.
Thompson, L. (2007). Pimps up, ho’s down: Hip hop’s hold on young black women. 187
Tyree, T. M. (2009). Lovin momma and hatin’ on baby mama: A comparison of misogynistic & stereotypical representation in songs about rapper’ mothers and baby mamas. Women and Language, 32(2), 50-58.
To view the entire annotated bibliography click here.
For instructions on writing a reference list click here.