Fighting for Attention Through Rap Music: Shock-Value, Racial Play and Web Culture in the Persona of Tyler, The Creator

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51191/issn.2637-1898.2022.5.8.104

Keywords:

Tyler The Creator, web culture, critical race theory, rap, hip-hop

Abstract

Tyler, The Creator (Tyler Gregory Okonma), is a Grammy-awarded African American rapper, music producer and entrepreneur who has been vigorously challenging tropes of black American masculinity; mainly through his internet savvy and smart use of audio-visual digital platforms such as YouTube. From chattel slavery to blackface minstrelsy, the African diasporic experience in the West is marked by a series of stigmas, contradictions and dichotomies evidenced in the challenge of being black in a white world. This duplicity denounced by seminal scholars such as W.E.B. DuBois and Frantz Fanon informs the theoretical framework of this article but also reflects most of Tyler’s investments in subverting American whiteness and blackness in his audio-visual performances. Not by chance, identity is central in our current digital era and so it is prominent in web culture which is marked by the constant exposition of one’s persona and its ephemerality in the vast ocean of data. Tyler, as one of the first YouTube music phenomena, knew how to expose and at the same time rework his own contradictions as an African American artist by constantly juxtaposing, shifting and remodeling his own discourses and persona in the digital environment. In this article, I discuss his strategies by inquiring into why his early shock-value ethos and persistent racial play are relevant to connect with fans and expose his artistic productions in our current postmodern times.

Author Biography

  • Gustavo Souza Marques, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

    Gustavo Souza Marques, also known by his stage names Gusmão and Gusashi, is a hip-hop scholar and music producer from Brazil who has been developing an international career intersecting the experiences and studies of African diaspora. From his MA on Duelo de MCs – Brazil’s biggest hip-hop street battle which is held in his hometown of Belo Horizonte – developing an ethnographic and musicological research on Brazilian street culture, freestyling and rap music to carrying out a PhD dissertation on the musical work of Tyler, The Creator; an avant-garde African American rapper, music producer and entrepreneur, Marques has shown an exhilarating intellectual engagement with the racial and societal challenges we are facing globally today. Now, Marques is looking forward to publish his dissertation as a monograph and developing a postdoc on Afro-Asian studies; expanding his work and interests in Africana studies toward Asia.

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Published

15.07.2021

How to Cite

Fighting for Attention Through Rap Music: Shock-Value, Racial Play and Web Culture in the Persona of Tyler, The Creator. (2021). INSAM Journal of Contemporary Music, Art and Technology, 8, 104–123. https://doi.org/10.51191/issn.2637-1898.2022.5.8.104