Popular Culture Review Vol. 11, No. 2, Summer 2000 | Page 51

Media-Transmitted African-American Attitudes 47 and with the dominant media's infixing the gangster image in rap music. This analysis then suggests that the present rap ‘"phenomenon” is a media event, or a “hyperreality” in the sphere of “televisuality” in Fiske’s sense (Fiske 2). Jean Baudrillard’s theory concerning the dissolution of representation into simulation in contemporary society further helps us to unpack the postmodern condition surrounding rap, the media, and the audience. Even though Gangsta Rap is a media construction, this fact alone hardly curtails its established commercial appeal. For, despite Gangsta Rap's constructedness, audience members cannot help but read signs of reality, or simulate their experience of reality, by accessing the representation of it through rap. Regardless of the arbitrariness of the signs in Gangsta Rap, audience members receive some sense o f reality from its representations; and it is basically impossible to experience the real outside of the constructedness of the model in this situation. Yet, more fundamentally in a realm of constructed simulations— including the society in which the televisual reality of “gangster” prevails over the actual social problems concerning minority lives— there is no single absolute standard forjudging the epistemological adequacy of the one-to-one relations between sign and object, which are for Ice-T, the rap message and black social experiences. Baudrillard declares the end of epistemology based on the subject-object relationship, mediated through signification. For, in a realm of constructed simulation, there is no standard forjudging the epistemological adequacy of sign to object. Nonetheless, according to Baudrillard, social order requires a certain sense of reality to provide grounds for truth, falsity, and rational distinction, upon all of which power depends. This is the moment at which “the power of media control” emerges (as in the way that Public Enemy proposes); at the same time, as Rose argues, the connection between rap music and violence is authenticated. In this ironic inversion, power must derive its reality from the dominant representation to establish, at least, some possibility of an intelligible distinction between the senses of true and false. As a consequence, the agency of power of the media propagates simulation, or a hypeireality (Baudrillard 39-46). This hyperreality does not mean that musicians called Gangsta Rappers do not really exist. But rather, as Dyson puts it, this concept explains “the genre's essential constructedness, its literal artifice”; now “many ‘gangstas' turn out to be middle-class blacks faking home boy roots” (179). Analyzed in this way, the activity o f G angsta R appers seems to exem plify the schem e o f strategic selfcommodification. They have, in a sense, fabricated particular black images complicitOLis with the dominant stereotypes. Flowever, they seem not to be concerned about the absence of “real life” in their representations, because for them, the representations themselves, in reality, generate money and attract mass attention. This is their paradoxical way of resisting the dominant culture by