The Commercial Appeal

‘Why Bushwick Bill Matters’ offers blend of biography, cultural analysis, personal reflection

- Aram Goudsouzia­n Chapter16.org

In the early 1990s, the Geto Boys blasted their way into the national conversati­on. Cultural conservati­ves decried the profane, irreverent hip-hop group from Houston that featured Bushwick Bill, a short person who boasted, in one famous track, that “Size Ain’t S---.” In "Why Bushwick Bill Matters," Charles L. Hughes blends biography, cultural analysis and personal reflection to situate this iconic artist in the dynamics of race, sex, disability and national politics.

Hughes is the director of the Lynne and Henry Turley Memphis Center at Rhodes College. His previous book, "Country Soul: Making Music and Making Race in the American South," was named one of the “Best Music Books of 2015” by Rolling Stone. He answered questions via email from Chapter 16.

Chapter 16: You write that Bushwick Bill, who died in 2019, was “one of the few musicians with a noticeable physical disability to address it in such a direct and sustained manner.” Given the public perception­s of disabled people, how could he highlight his short stature, yet avoid getting defined by it? It seems like a difficult balancing act.

Charles Hughes: It is a very difficult balancing act, one that that disabled artists (and people) have to negotiate all the time. Throughout his career, Bushwick Bill didn’t seem to care about reconcilin­g this tension. He talked about shortness all the time and discussed how it shaped his experience­s and the world around him. But he also talked about a variety of other things, from sex to politics to his faith and beyond, in ways that did not directly address disability. But his size was always part of his identity.

Q: Occasional­ly, you inject firstperson voice and discuss your personal experience­s as a short person — particular­ly the presumptio­ns and condescens­ion from able-bodied people. How does your own disability shape your interpreta­tion of "Why Bushwick Bill Matters"?

A: I didn’t want to make the book about me, but I did want to acknowledg­e how my life has been enriched by Bushwick Bill’s work. His music and public life are a perhaps surprising source of encouragem­ent, and I talk about the ways that it has informed my experience­s. Of course, I also contend with the fact that — despite our shared physicalit­y — we are also very different. As a white man, for example, I address how my identification with Bushwick Bill might resonate with a more complicate­d racial history. I wanted to use autobiogra­phy as a crucial but limited element within a broader appreciati­on of the artist and his moment. I hope I succeeded.

Q: By the early 1990s, as the Geto Boys rose to prominence, the culture wars were defining national politics. How did Bushwick Bill fit into those debates about morality, music and race?

A: The Geto Boys were both vilified and celebrated as hip-hop became a primary battlegrou­nd in U.S. politics. They were cited by politician­s like Bob Dole and activists like C. Delores Tucker as part of larger anti-rap campaigns. And they were defended by free speech advocates and those who recognized attacks on hip-hop as anti-black backlash. Bushwick Bill was their spokesman, laying out the defense of his work and of rap culture more generally. This got messy — especially when it came to legitimate concerns expressed by Black women — but Bill’s prominence both connected to and was created by his physical difference. In the book, I trace the way that his moment as a figure of political controvers­y had deep historical roots.

Q: In 1991, Bushwick Bill blinded himself in one eye with a stray gunshot, while clearly struggling with mental health issues. How did the media and the public treat this incident? How did Bushwick Bill address it?

A: This is the most famous/infamous moment in Bushwick Bill’s life. He was pictured in the hospital on the cover of the Geto Boys’ classic album "We Can’t Be Stopped," and the incident remains central to how people remember him. On one hand, he embraced it, using the shooting and its contexts to deepen his discussion­s of mental illness, drug use and other issues. It became a centerpiec­e of songs on Geto Boys albums and his underappre­ciated solo career. But in his songs and statements, he also tried to redirect the narrative around the shooting, suggesting that it revealed far more than many of his critics (and even many of his fans) might admit.

To read the full version of this interview — and more local book coverage — please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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