https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241617716744 https://doi.org/10.1177/0891241617716744
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography
1–31
© The Author(s) 2017
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DOI: 10.1177/0891241617716744
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Article
“That $hit Ain’t
Gangsta”: Symbolic
Boundary Making in an
Online Urban Gossip
Community
Antonia Randolph
1
, Holly Swan
2
,
and Kristin Denise Rowe
3
Abstract
This paper examines how commenters (N= 290 posts) to an urban gossip
blog interpret the meaning of ambiguously sexual behavior: a kiss shared
by two male gangsta rappers. It shows that fans use the same interpretive
repertoire to come to very different conclusions about the meaning of the
rappers’ sexual orientation in the wake of the kiss. Other research finds
that hegemonic masculinity has expanded to include touch between men as
a legitimate expression of heterosexual intimacy, yet that literature ignores
or pathologizes marginalized men (Bridges and Pascoe 2014; McCormack
and Anderson 2014). Our study makes up for this gap by exploring the
frames and concerns native to hip-hop culture that explain how fans label
the rappers’ sexuality as a result of the kiss. We find that fans are particularly
concerned with policing the boundary around thug masculinity, the most
valorized form of masculinity within hip-hop culture.
Keywords
masculinity, hip-hop, sexuality
1
Winston-Salem State University, Winston-Salem, NC, USA
2
Abt Associates, Wheeler Street, Cambridge, MA, USA
3
Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA
Corresponding Author:
Antonia Randolph, Winston-Salem State University, Coltrane Hall 203, Winston-Salem,
NC 27110, USA,
Email: antonia.randolph@cnu.edu
716744JCE XX X 10.1177/0891241617716744Journal of Contemporary EthnographyRandolph et al.
research-article 2017