Beyoncé and the Bigger Question
http://homebrewedchristianity.com/2013/02/05/beyonce-and-the-bigger-question/
February
5, 2013 by Bo Sanders 9 Comments
It is with great
interest that I have read the blowback over the Beyoncé SuperBowl Half-Time
Show. I have read several interesting articles –
both in support and in criticism – of the spectacle.
I
get why people want to talk about her outfit, her moves, and her assembled cast
of all females – about modesty, sexuality, and female empowerment. I get why
those are conversation points.
What
is becoming a trend, however, is that I have little interest in that
conversation – not until we have a more significant conversation first.
I
think that it is time I lay all my cards on the table.
While
I was in seminary, my mentor Randy Woodley, showed me how to look at bigger
systems and structures than I was used to. I have continued down that road and during
my time at Claremont have been in dialogue with a school of
thought called ‘Critical Theory’.
Critical Theory has taught me to ask 3 initial questions in order
to examine an issue:
- Is there a pattern visible?
- Is there something behind the main thing?
- Is there any issue of power differential?
The
Critical part is that we are going beyond the initial perceptions, the
popular approach and the cultural conversation. The Theory part is that
we are going to see if we might offer an explanation about the deeper issue.
SO
let’s ask our 3 questions about the SuperBowl Half-Time hullaballoo.
- Is there a pattern visible?
I
would argue that there is. I noticed it just before kickoff – during the Nation
Anthem to be specific. Alecia Keys was introduced, Jennifer Hudson had just
sang with the kids from Sandy Hook … and I knew that Beyoncé was the halftime
show.
I
thought to myself:
I
noticed that CBS didn’t even have a black female sideline reporter like Pam Oliver (on FOX) for its NFL broadcasts.
I watched the rest of the festivities – including all the military stuff – and
was struck by the noticeable lack of black women associated with the event.
Walter Payton’s daughter presented Jason Witten with the NFL Man of the Year
award … but that was about it. None of the coaches or commentators … not
even many of the commercials involved black women. This seemed
significant since so many of the on-screen TV personalities, coaches and
players are black.
- Is there something behind the main thing?
It
is easy to see the answer to this one. The answer is consumerism. While the
game itself is ‘the main event’ the commercial aspect of the SuperBowl has
become at-least or almost as big. Commercials this year sold for a reported 4
million dollars a piece. Like the controversy we covered yesterday in the ‘So God Made a Farmer’,
commercialism-capitalism-consumerism is the unspoken thing.
It
might be hard to see in a short blog post like this but Beyoncé isn’t the
telling controversy. The more telling one was the criticism of Alicia Keys’
soulful rendition of the national anthem. People criticized her not just for
sitting at a piano (!) but for altering the tried and true version of the song.
In
CT when something is assumed – even if unstated – as a dominant form, it is called
hegemony. It is a type of power or influence that may or may not
be overtly communicated. If one were to look at just the first half of the
SuperBowl broadcast, it might be possible to say that the major narrative when
it comes black women is twofold:
- you can sing – we like that.
- but make sure you do it our way. Don’t do anything too much or too … you know… that’s not why you are here.
- Is there any issue of power differential?
This
is the one that we never get around to talking about. Maybe it’s because we
don’t know how to or don’t have frameworks for it. There is a question
that needs to be asked though: who decided that Jennifer Hudson, Alecia Keys
and Beyoncé would sing? What did that committee look like? Who are in
those seats of power?
Did
the group that decided who would sing look like Jennifer Hudson, Alecia Keys,
and Beyoncé?
I
don’t know, I’m asking an honest question. It’s the tough question that no one
wants to ask. Who has the resources? Who has the influence? Who makes the
decisions? Who sits in the seats of power?
Now
you can see why I am not interested in talking about whether Beyoncé should
have had more clothes on, should have gyrated less or is a model for taking
back one’s physicality in the face of generations of oppression and marginalization.
Those
are all secondary conversations.
The
primary conversation is about what place black women hold in our culture.
It
is a much bigger conversation with much deeper consequences than if Beyonce’s
hips and
wardrobe were appropriate for a Half-Time show.
Comments
Post a Comment