“Dig If You Will the Picture: Prince's Subversion of Hegemonic Black
HOWARD JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATIONS 2019, VOL. 30, NO. 2, 129–143 https://doi.org/10.1080/10646175.2018.1536566 “Dig if you will the Picture: Prince’s Subversion of Hegemonic Black Masculinity, and the Fallacy of Racial Transcendence” Kevin Talmer Whiteneir Jr. School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA ABSTRACT KEYWORDS Representations of Blackness are often limited to a narrow selection Blackness; masculinity; race; of archetypes despite the everyday experience of Blackness being gender; Prince immeasurably varied. Its intersectionality with class, gender, sexuality, age, ability, and more is complex and cannot simply be transcended as if it does not shape our choices, our ideologies, and our cognitive frameworks. And Prince, as a Black man, and as an artist, was no stranger to this. Flirting with the demarcated boundaries of every- thing, including gender and race, Prince presented us with a seem- ingly endless catalogue of musical and performative works that showcase, not “transcend,” the complexity of Blackness, masculinity, and their cultural intersections. This essay will analyze how Prince challenged racial stereotyping, the false equivalence of this with racial transcendence by looking at Prince’s Purple Rain era. In doing so, I push to undermine this interpretation of racial transcendence, articulate how race is in fact inextricable from his artistry, and illus- trate how an awareness of this serves to benefit the legibility of Blackness and Black gender dynamics within not only Prince’s art, but within Western society. Prince Rogers Nelson (1958–2016) was an artist whose name alone evoked images of purple rain, white lace, red corvettes, and raspberry berets.
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