Rife has been extensively dissed on social media for this behavior. Individuals discover it faux. Part of me did, as effectively, the primary time I caught him on TV. Nevertheless, I’m unsure we must always, in Rife’s case or in that of different non-Black celebrities (such because the Asian American rapper and actress Awkwafina) who dip into Black English. That is one thing non-Black individuals beneath about 40, superstar and in any other case, appear more and more to be doing in bizarre life. My college students have written papers testifying to this tendency each in speech and texting.
It’s Human Language 101 that folks style-switch on a regular basis, even when they aren’t switching into a unique language or a definite dialect from that time on. “Wow, this insurance coverage for my flight is so costly … however ya gotta be careful for yerself, I suppose!” you would possibly say when stressing your good outdated Everyman pragmatism. Many Black Individuals change out and in of Black English in the identical approach, utilizing it as a sort of seasoning.
In fact, the query is why a white man like Rife is doing that, as a substitute of switching right into a extra vanilla model of colloquial white English. And the rationale appears to be that Black English, for him, as for thus many Black individuals, is a consolation zone, the place all of it will get actual.
It was peculiar for a white individual to course of Black English that approach, to the purpose of constructing private use of it, till roughly the late Nineties. However issues have modified. Rife, born in 1995, grew up with rap as mainstream music in America, with most of its patrons white, and Dave Chappelle was a mainstream superstar. It’s cheap to think about that Rife thinks his viewers processes his Black English utilization as a heat methodology of interpersonal bonding in the identical approach he appears to. In truth, a tweet of his means that he hadn’t even been aware of what he was doing till apprised, and doesn’t even consider himself as shifting into one thing “Black” in any respect.
In different phrases, Rife is just not posing or ridiculing; he’s connecting. Linguists name it lodging. A non-Black speaker as of late could do it with a Black viewers. On a few events some time again, I noticed one of many founders of the KIPP constitution faculty community, Dave Levin, style-shift right into a slight however perceptible Black English sound on and off when he was addressing largely Black audiences. That is the linguistic equal, in its approach, of the youth voting activist Billy “Upski” Wimsatt’s outdated behavior of beginning or closing out his group periods on school campuses by calling on everybody to bop collectively. (I’ll admit that I discovered Wimsatt’s dancing bit sort of faux on the time, however I wanted to ease up.)
