"DJing as a Filipino Thing" 4/11 journal

The excerpt explained some of the ways in which Filipino Americans attempted to legitimize or authenticate their involvement with hip-hop, given that they were not originally the ones to make it.  Those who were interviewed argued that although they were not directly linked to black culture, they were however connected to hip-hop itself given that they grew up with it, and were surrounded by it at an early age.  Meaning that hip-hop was already, in a way, a part of Filipino culture, at least for the Filipino youth.

However, I was particularly interested in the sections which explained the ways that hip-hop affected the Filipino identity within the United States.  DJing had allowed the Filipino youth to be more recognized socially, or at the very least within hip-hop.  However, this also brought up the problem of misrecognition of Filipino Americans as something else, such as Chinese or Japanese.  This was probably due to the categorization of Filipinos as Asian American.  Some of those Interviewed felt that the Asian American Category was too broad, and therefore did not give them any identity.  However others went on to say that they viewed their music as racially neutral, downplaying the race issue.

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