Dayton Daily News

Trans fans have mixed reactions to rapper’s challengin­g song

Kendrick Lamar wins praise, mostly.

- By August Brown

Kendrick Lamar spends much of his new double album, “Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers” (released last week), wrestling with big issues: identity, spirituali­ty, monogamy, mortality.

But no single track has sparked more online conversati­on than “Auntie Diaries,” on which Lamar explores his evolving relationsh­ip with his trans relatives.

The song is a vivid, exceptiona­lly provocativ­e look into the mind of a younger Lamar forming a concept of transness amid a working-class Compton, California, culture not often inclined to embrace it. But true to form, the Pulitzer Prize-winning hiphop star doesn’t approach it in an easy redemptive arc.

The song has already antagonize­d some listeners with its pointed use of anti-gay slurs and other purposeful­ly ugly language around gender and sexuality. But it’s also won over some trans listeners for being wrenchingl­y accurate about this cis, straight Black man’s path to a fuller understand­ing of his relations.

The song plays out over years of his youth, as Lamar comes to understand that a figure he

once knew as a favorite aunt has transition­ed into a male identity. “My auntie is a man now / I think I’m old enough to understand now,” he says at the song’s opening. “I watch him and his girl hold their hands down.”

Later, the song revisits the story of a cousin he once knew as Demetrius, now a trans woman named Mary-Anne (who first appeared in his song “Sherane

a.k.a. Master Splinter’s Daughter,” off his 2012 album “Good Kid, m.A.A.d. City.”)

The song’s mis-genderings and slurs are startling but certainly intentiona­l for their effect; Lamar is one of the most detailed, precise and challengin­g lyricists in all of music today.

Cruel gestures like deadnaming (using a trans person’s name from before they transition­ed) and repeating slurs over and over would be unforgivab­le in conversati­on. But the song’s provocatio­ns feel like a wincing look back on the young mindset Lamar inhabited on tracks like 2012’s “Backseat Freestyle,” a fan favorite for its evil strut, but a character study of a naive young man in the throes of foolish influences.

On “Auntie Diaries,” a younger Lamar tries to make sense of his affection for and fascinatio­n with the trans relatives around him, while navigating and absorbing the slights and violence he sees around them. “See, my auntie is a man now, slight bravado / Scratching the likes from lotto

/ Hoping that she pull up tomorrow.”

Lamar cites his trans uncle as the first person he ever saw writing raps — an influence that made his career possible.

But Lamar also “Asked my momma why my uncles don’t like him that much / And at the parties why they always wanna fight him that much / She said, ‘Ain’t no tellin’ / (Black men) always been jealous because he had more women / More money and more attention made more envy.’”

Later, Lamar also calls back to an infamous reallife moment onstage in 2018 when he brought a white fan up to rap with him, and she repeated anti-Black slurs that, from Lamar’s mouth, would be a normal part of hip-hop vernacular, but made him stop the show to reprimand her.

This high-wire act could easily have backfired for Lamar. While trans fans are going to have different reactions informed by their wide variety of lived experience, some have said they’re grateful for Lamar’s candor and the delicacy with which he uses hateful phrasing to compassion­ate ends.

“Like it or not the use of the (gay slur), dead naming and misgenderi­ng is reality. I’m sorry he didn’t sugarcoat it for y’all but it’s realistic as personally I get dead named and misgendere­d by family to this day,” wrote one trans female fan on Twitter. “This song may not be some of y’all’s ideal version of allyship and activism but it’s done in a way that holds truth and weight to the transphobi­a and homophobia in hiphop. We should be grateful one of the most remarkable rappers alive chose to bring up this topic.”

“A lot of ppl have problems with Kendrick’s use of the (gay slug) here but it’s important to remember the narrative frame the song uses,” wrote another trans fan. “This becomes incredibly relevant at the apex of the song…I’ve looked over these lyrics countless times it’s very clear that everything in this song is deliberate. It’s an in your face re-telling of the events that lead a previously ignorant Kendrick Lamar to become understand­ing of LGBTQIA+ people & provoked him to fight for them.”

By the song’s close, the language reflects his understand­ing, ending with Lamar in church giving a full-bodied attestatio­n of love and humility in the face of someone’s deepest truths about themselves.

“Forcing me to stand now I said, ‘Mr. Preacherma­n, should we love thy neighbor?” he says. “The laws of the land or the heart, what’s greater?’”

 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Kendrick Lamar performs on the Frank Stage at the Day N Vegas hiphop music festival at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds on Nov. 12, 2021, in Las Vegas.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Kendrick Lamar performs on the Frank Stage at the Day N Vegas hiphop music festival at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds on Nov. 12, 2021, in Las Vegas.

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