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RapandMoralCharacter.doc

Rap and Moral Character

Various critics have railed against the alleged harms of rap music.

It is misogynistic and promotes violence (especially toward women),

crass materialism, and street crime. Virtually all of the arguments

about rap focus on its alleged effects—harmful or, occasionally,

beneficial. Yet such arguments are difficult to prove. While not

suggesting we abandon approaches like this, the focus on effects

ignores another important moral argument—rap music is both a

sign of and contributes to a form of corruption of moral character.

Morality is not simply about actions, consequences, and effects

on others. It is also about oneself and the development of one’s own

character. Being self-centred, cowardly, or weak-willed may not

harm others, but we do judge such things in terms of morality. Who

we are and the motives for our actions are important. Two people

may do the same thing but for different reasons. We, justifiably,

judge them differently. Two nephews may be attentive to their

elderly aunt, taking her places, buying groceries, seeing to her

welfare. If we judged them solely in terms of the consequences of

their actions, there would be no difference between them. But

maybe one nephew has no love for his aunt and helps her solely out

of hope that he will benefit in her will. The other maybe helps her

because he loves her and is concerned about her well-being. We

judge their actions differently because of intent. Even the legal

system considers motive and character. A person who pushes a

man in front of a moving bus with the intent of killing him is judged

differently than one who stumbles and pushes the man accidentally.

Character is important in morally assessing ourselves and others.

Rap both indicates and contributes to a corrupt personal character.

Rap lyrics (and accompanying videos) are full of images of “hos”

and pimps, guns, violence, the killing of cops, dissing and

being dissed, dominance, and drug dealing. It is rife with jewellery

-wearing thugs promoting crass materialism and hostile sexual

stereotyping. Women are subjected to the crudest form of sexual

subjugation—as merely the sexual playthings of violent men—to be

used, pimped out, and discarded.

The imagery is unrelenting. And it glorifies a world of misogyny,

where crass materialism by any means, where violence as a primary

means of settling disagreements, and where illegal activity—drug

dealing, stealing, killing cops—are considered normal and desirable.

People who choose to listen to and watch such material on a

regular basis are saying something about their own moral character,

about what they value, about who they are. They are endorsing the

behaviours the genre exemplifies. Seeking out such material is like

seeking out and choosing to watch portrayals of atrocities, such as

rapes, executions, and real-life violence, all of which are available in

our culture and on the Internet.

One could argue that people might listen to rap only for the music

and not pay attention to the lyrics. In response, consider the

following parallel. Imagine that a genre of music emerged that had

interesting music but whose lyrics and accompanying videos were

entirely devoted to the denigration of a particular race and the

superiority of another. I doubt that we would believe that self-described

nonracist people listened only for the artistry of the music and ignored

the lyrics. But even if this was the case, we would likely still find a

moral failing in that. Their failure to see and condemn the message

of the lyrics would itself be a moral failing. Finally, even if

some individuals failed to recognize the message of the lyrics, that

cannot be true of everyone who listens to the material. If it was

simply the music and not the lyrics that was important, other lyrics

would develop. This singular vision would not be as pervasive in the

genre. Other genres are not as unrelenting and uniform in their

vision of the world.

The state cannot prevent us from corrupting our character, nor

should it. However, that does not prevent me, as an individual, from

deploring the corruption of character in rap. We make a decision

when we choose to listen to music. The choice to persistently listen

to a form of music that celebrates thugs, violence, drug dealing,

crass materialism, and the denigration of women shows a

corruption of character and deserves moral censure.