At the 2020 BET Hip-Hop Awards, held October 27, North Carolina wordsmith Rapsody took home the award for Lyricist of the Year. Though she was up against four male emceesโ€”three of whom had built their careers on being lyrical mavensโ€”it was no surprise that Rapsody came out on top.ย 

We knew, and she knew, that this moment was long overdue.ย 

Earlier this year, Rapsodyโ€™s critically acclaimed 2019 sophomore album, EVE, became the basis of two college courses. One, taught by Simone Drake, a distinguished professor of African American and African studies at The Ohio State University, places EVE in conversation with the writings of novelist Toni Morrison; the other, by doctoral student Tyler Bunzey at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, contextualizes EVEโ€™s tracklist with seminal texts by Black women scholars like Angela Davis, Audre Lorde, and Anna Julia Cooper. Both courses rely on Black feminism and womanism theories and solidify EVE as a text of high intellectual merit in the field of hip-hop studies.ย 

โ€œOne of the highest honors is to create art for the culture and have it taught in our educational institutions!โ€ Rapsody wrote on Instagram when news of the courses was announced back in the Spring.ย 

The recognition has been years in the making. EVE was overlooked at last yearโ€™s Grammys, despite having received widespread praise. Earlier that year, even Rolling Stone had declared the album, which features a tracklist of 16 songs named for influential Black women, a โ€œmasterpiece of hip-hop feminism.โ€ And while Rapsodyโ€™s RocNation debut Lailaโ€™s Wisdom had landed her nominations for Best Rap Album and Best Rap Song, it was Eve that catapulted her into tense โ€œBest Rapperโ€ discourse.

Outraged at the snub, fans took to social media, protesting that the musician deserved, at minimum, a nomination for Album of the Year.ย 

At the October 27 BET Hip-Hop Awards, things played out more favorably for her. But Rapsodyโ€™s gratitude and humility remained present.ย 

โ€œThis my first award for anything,โ€ she said in her acceptance speech. โ€œIโ€™m happy that itโ€™s from BET…it means something that itโ€™s from a Black network, and itโ€™s for lyricist of the year. The women donโ€™t always get represented for that. Iโ€™m grateful.โ€ Next, she paid homage to all the women in hip-hop who had paved the way for her. Finally, in true hip-hop fashion, she shouted out her momma.ย 

It was a memorable moment for Rapsody; earlier this month, students of Tyler Bunzeyโ€™s ENG 190 course experienced something similarly epic when the class received a surprise guest speaker.ย 

โ€œI think one girl [said to the instructor,] โ€˜I think somebody might be Zoom-bombing our class. Thereโ€™s an extra person here,โ€™โ€ says Treasure Rouse, a political science and history major from Raleigh.

It took a few minutes for the students, who had logged onto the virtual class thinking theyโ€™d be reviewing midterm material, to grasp that the Zoom bomber was Rapsody. The artist popped up on Zoom full of good energy and excitement, recalling her exuberance during her BET win, and students had the chance to chop it up for more than an hour with the NC heavy spitta herself. Rapsody greeted each student by name before leading them in a conversation that spanned politics, fashion, and Black womenโ€™s hair.ย 

โ€œHip-hop has always been multimodal,โ€ Bunzey says, reflecting on his courseโ€™s wide range of material and media. โ€œ[This] allows us to think through things in a more synthetic way, as opposed to trying to include them in a disciplinary lens.โ€ย 

Arya Kode, an economics and math major who identifies as a child of Indian immigrants, came to the course with little knowledge on American hip-hop culture.ย 

โ€œOne of my favorite things about this course are the guest speakers,โ€ Kode says. โ€œThatโ€™s a really cool feature that I feel like a lot of UNC classes donโ€™t doโ€”to allow you to engage with people that are actually doing the work in the real world.โ€ย 

Kode says the experience of being surprised by a Grammy-nominated star was โ€œwild.โ€ย 

โ€œI was like, โ€˜Okay, itโ€™s gonna be a chill Wednesday. Maybe Iโ€™ll talk once,โ€™โ€ he says, โ€œNo! I had to get out of bed and make myself presentable. Even with all that, it made my day. It was a really fun, honestly very casual, cool conversation. Just getting to interact with the creator of the piece that is the centerpiece of an entire semesterโ€™s worth of work and discussionโ€”when all the work and discussion has already been valuableโ€”is priceless.โ€ย 

The Lyricist of the Year award is a testament to Rapsodyโ€™s dedication. With ten years in the game, amid increased visibility and popularity, sheโ€™s never folded. And she responded to the recognition from hip-hop scholars and their students in the same way as she did her first award.ย 

ย โ€œLiterally the moment she put her camera on, and it registered in my mind like, โ€˜Yooo this is Rapsody!โ€™โ€”it was super, super cool. And I feel like Tyler did such a good job prepping us for questions to ask,โ€ Rouse says. โ€œIt was even more cool because [the conversation] wasnโ€™t just one specific focus. You know, it was just like talking to another person in the grocery store down the street.โ€ย 


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