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In defense of Vanessa Hudgens and Cultural Appropriation


https://www.bustle.com/articles/191278-vanessa-hudgens-box-braids-lead-to-cultural-appropriation-accusations-a-lot-of-upset-twitter-users

Over the weekend, Vanessa Hudgens shared Snapchats of herself wearing a head full of braids that look like box or individual braids — traditionally black hairstyles. Needless to say, it did not take long for followers to call out Hudgens for cultural appropriation, with many expressing their anger, disappointment, and shock at her choice of hairstyle.

People took to Twitter in droves to slam Hudgens and accuse her of cultural appropriation — something she has been accused of multiple times before. (Hudgens has worn bindis to several Coachellas past.) For her part, the Grease: Live star has not yet responded to any of the controversy surrounding her most recent Snapchats, but she was clearly into the hair — which may have been a wig — posing coyly and captioning the photo, "Yaaas braids." Bustle has reached out to Hudgens' rep for comment, but has not yet received a response.

Twitter, for the most part, was pretty much "Noooo braids," with most users responding with GIF reactions and a whole lot of frustration. One even went so far as to label Hudgens the "queen of cultural appropriation." Yikes.




This controversy of Vanessa's cultural appropriation is nothing more than legitimatized racism masquerading as cultural sensitivity. I swear these Twitter followers sound like Trump supporters if Trump supporters were ultra liberal.


To the new culture cops, everything is appropriation

Their protests ignore history, chill artistic expression and hurt diversity

few months ago, I read “The Orphan’s Tales” by Catherynne Valente. The fantasy novel draws on myths and folklore from many cultures, including, to my delight, fairy tales from my Russian childhood. Curious about the author, I looked her up online and was startled to find several social-media discussions bashing her for “cultural appropriation.”

There was a post sneering at “how she totally gets a pass to write about Slavic cultures because her husband is Russian,” with a response noting that her spouse isn’t even a proper Russian, because he has lived in the United States since age 10. In another thread, Valente was denounced for her Japanese-style LiveJournal username, yuki-onna, adopted while she lived in Japan as a military wife. In response to such criticism, a browbeaten Valente eventually dropped the “problematic” moniker.

Welcome to the new war on cultural appropriation. At one time, such critiques were leveled against truly offensive art — work that trafficked in demeaning caricatures, such as blackface, 19th-century minstrel shows or ethnological expositions, which literally put indigenous people on display, often in cages. But these accusations have become a common attack against any artist or artwork that incorporates ideas from another culture, no matter how thoughtfully or positively. A work can reinvent the material or even serve as a tribute, but no matter. If artists dabble outside their own cultural experiences, they’ve committed a creative sin.

To take just a few recent examples: After the 2013 American Music Awards, Katy Perry was criticized for dressing like a geisha while performing her hit single “Unconditionally.” Last year, Arab-American writer Randa Jarrar accused Caucasian women who practice belly dancing of “white appropriation of Eastern dance.” Daily Beast entertainment writer Amy Zimmerman wrote that pop star Iggy Azalea perpetrated “cultural crimes” by imitating African American rap styles.

And this summer, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston has been dogged by charges of cultural insensitivity and racism for its “Kimono Wednesdays.” At the event, visitors were invited to try on a replica of the kimono worn by Claude Monet’s wife, Camille, in the painting “La Japonaise.” The historically accurate kimonos were made in Japan for this very purpose. Still, Asian American activists and their supporters besieged the exhibit with signs like “Try on the kimono: Learn what it’s like to be a racist imperialist today!” Others railed against “Yellow-Face @ the MFA” on Facebook. The museum eventually apologized and changed the program so that the kimonos were available for viewing only. Still, activists complained that the display invited a “creepy Orientalist gaze.”




These protests have an obvious potential to chill creativity and artistic expression. But they are equally bad for diversity, raising the troubling specter of cultural cleansing. When we attack people for stepping outside their own cultural experiences, we hinder our ability to develop empathy and cross-cultural understanding.

* * *

The concept of cultural appropriation emerged in academia in the late 1970s and 1980s as part of the scholarly critique of colonialism. By the mid-1990s, it had gained a solid place in academic discourse, particularly in the field of sociology.

Some of this critique was rightly directed at literal cultural theft — the pilfering of art and artifacts by colonial powers — or glaring injustices, such as white entertainers in the pre-civil rights years profiting off black musical styles while black performers’ careers were hobbled by racism. Critics such as Edward Said offered valuable insight into Orientalism, the West’s tendency to fetishize Asians as exotic stereotypes.

But the hunt for wrongdoing has gone run amok. The recent anti-appropriation rhetoric has targeted creative products from art to literature to clothing. Nothing is too petty for the new culture cops: I have seen them rebuke a Filipina woman who purchased a bracelet with a yin-yang symbol at a fair and earnestly discuss whether it’s appropriation to eat Japanese, Indian or Thai food. Even Selena Gomez, a Latina artist, was assailed a couple of years ago for sporting a Hindu forehead dot, or bindi, in a Bollywood-style performance.

In some social-justice quarters, the demonization of “appropriative” interests converges with ultra-reactionary ideas about racial and cultural purity. I once read an anguished blog post by a well-meaning young woman racked with doubt about her plans to pursue a graduate degree in Chinese studies; after attending a talk on cultural appropriation, she was unsure that it was morally permissible for a white person to study the field.

This is a skewed and blinkered view. Yes, most cross-fertilization has taken place in a context of unequal power. Historically, interactions between cultures often took the form of wars, colonization, forced or calamity-driven migration and subordination or even enslavement of minority groups. But it is absurd to single out the West as the only culprit. Indeed, there is a paradoxical and perverse Western-centrism in ignoring the history of Middle Eastern and Asian empires or the modern economic and cultural clout of non-Western nations — for instance, the fact that one of the top three entertainment companies in the U.S. market is Japanese-owned Sony.

It is also far from clear that the appropriation police speak for the people and communities whose cultural honor they claim to defend. The kimono protest, for instance, found little support from Japanese Americans living in the Boston area; indeed, many actively backed the museum’s exhibit, as did the Japanese consulate.

Most critics of appropriation, including some anti-kimono protesters, say they don’t oppose engagement with other cultures if it’s done in a “culturally affirming” way. A Daily Dot article admonishes that “an authentic cultural exchange should feel free and affirming, rather than plagiarizing or thieving.” A recent post on the Tumblr “This Is Not China” declares that “cultural appropriation is not merely the act of wearing or partaking in cultural symbols & practices that do not belong to you, it’s a system of exploitation & capitalisation on cultural symbols & practices that do not a) originate from b) benefit c) circle back to the culture in question.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2015/08/21/to-the-new-culture-cops-everything-is-appropriation/?utm_term=.e0a54e513f73

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I didn't read all that stuff, sorry.

Personally, I don't care if Vanessa wants to wear "box braids" or whatever they're called. Vanessa is so mixed, I doubt that it matters much to her about cultural specificity. Maybe the rest of us could learn from that.

However, I did see one of the pics of her that sent Twitter ablaze. In the pic, with the expression on her face, Vanessa kind of looks like she may have been mocking black women, and that is a different ball game altogether.

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So? That is what you think, Vanessa is not hurting anyone and so far is not insulting anyone, and people are making a big deal out of it,if black women are doing the same thing and no one makes a big deal, it smells hypocrisy, political correctness be damned

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if black women are doing the same thing and no one makes a big deal, it smells hypocrisy, political correctness be damned
Huh?? Where are you even getting this from???? I didn't say a word about black women doing anything, or FOR political correctness. You sure seem to have your spiel well-rehearsed and oiled up for use on this board.

If you don't have a problem with Vanessa possibly mocking black women, fine. I didn't post here to do anything but have dialogue...not to provoke people into unveiling their agendas.

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However, I did see one of the pics of her that sent Twitter ablaze. In the pic, with the expression on her face, Vanessa kind of looks like she may have been mocking black women, and that is a different ball game altogether.

@Satchmo_is_Cool How exactly is Vanessa mocking black women? Don't just make assertions, back it up with reason.

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Vanessa kind of looks like she may have been mocking black women

She's making a "duck face"

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/26/fashion/duckface-photos-on-facebook-draw-backlash.html?_r=0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SWBQUpNeZ5Y

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That's it, plus the "box braids"

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@Satchmo_is_Cool Are you serious?

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1. Who cares?

2. Blacks didn't invent dreadlocks, they used to be common in ancient Greece and many other cultures.


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dies ist meine unterschrift

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