Teyonnah Paris stars in "Slave Play"

Ol’Otis

The Picasso of the Ghetto
Joined
Aug 30, 2015
Messages
65,428
Reputation
20,052
Daps
267,737
Reppin
South Central Los Angeles
fukk with you when a sister so fine out here promoting c00nery, shyt let me be her agent she'll be on and doing quality films :francis:
teyonah_parris_516bf6.jpg
Why her breh @Daredevil @alexander.
 

voltronblack

Superstar
Joined
Aug 6, 2012
Messages
4,854
Reputation
2,382
Daps
14,791
Reppin
NULL
Yeah that why I learn over time never to take the coli posters opinions on what black entertainers are sell outs in or bed-buck or bed-wench or a c00n serous this slave play shyt she star in is almost like a political correct version of ghetto gag porn or a modern day Minstrel show where she take on the role of the Jezebel
The Jezebel stereotype was used during slavery as a rationalization for sexual relations between white men and black women, especially sexual unions involving slavers and slaves. The Jezebel was depicted as a black woman with an insatiable appetite for sex. She was not satisfied with black men. The slavery-era Jezebel, it was claimed, desired sexual relations with white men; therefore, white men did not have to rape black women. James Redpath (1859), an abolitionist no less, wrote that slave women were "gratified by the criminal advances of Saxons"(p. 141). This view is contradicted by Frederick Douglass (1968), the abolitionist and former slave, who claimed that the "slave woman is at the mercy of the fathers, sons or brothers of her master"(p. 60). Douglass's account is consistent with the accounts of other former slaves. Henry Bibb's (1849) master forced a young slave to be his son's concubine (pp. 98-99); later, Bibb and his wife were sold to a Kentucky trader who forced Bibb's wife into prostitution(pp . 112-116).
The Jezebel Stereotype - Anti-black Imagery - Jim Crow Museum - Ferris State University
 
Top