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Growing Up Where ‘No One Looked Like Me’: Gender, Race, Hip Hop and Identity in Vancouver

机译:在“没人像我”的地方长大:温哥华的性别,种族,嘻哈和身份

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This paper examines how youth whose parents came from sub-Saharan Africa negotiate racialized forms of masculinity and femininity in Vancouver, Canada. The study is based on interviews with second generation African-Canadian men and women, and explores gendered and racialized dimensions of growing up in neighbourhoods where they were usually the only African and Black children. In this context, the second generation engages with representations of Black masculinity and femininity widely circulated through American popular culture, especially through hip hop, constituting a dominant frame of reference among adolescents that contributes to the great popularity of African-Canadian teenage boys, while girls find it much harder to fit in.
机译:本文研究了父母来自撒哈拉以南非洲的青年如何在加拿大温哥华谈判种族化的男性气质和女性气质。这项研究基于对第二代非洲裔加拿大和加拿大男性和女性的采访,并探讨了在他们通常是唯一的非洲和黑人儿童的社区中长大的性别和种族因素。在这种情况下,第二代人参与了黑人的男性气质和女性气质的表征,在美国流行文化中,特别是在嘻哈文化中广为流传,构成了青少年中的主要参照系,这有助于非洲加拿大青少年男孩和女孩的大受欢迎。发现很难适应。

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