Shakira, according to her “diss track” about her ex-husband Gerard Pique, is worth “two 22-year-olds” – a reference to his new alleged partner. Only two? As the music video breaks records for being the most-viewed Latin song in YouTube’s history, I’d argue she’s worth at least ten.
The collaboration with Argentinian producer and DJ Bizarrap racked up over 63 million views in 24 hours, partly because the lyrics – written by Shakira – are unapologetically savage. Less than a month later, just in time for Valentine’s Day, the musician posted a video of herself lip-syncing to SZA’s Kill Bill, which features the tongue-in-cheek lyrics, “I just killed my ex, not the best idea…”
After Pique appeared to respond to the diss track by announcing a partnership with Casio (and going Instagram official with his new girlfriend), some of his fans took aim at Shakira on social media, with one even tweeting, “You gotta admit, this guy keeps winning. She’s out there creating diss tracks showing everyone that she’s bitter, while he’s out there banging 22 year olds and making money [sic].”
Let’s ignore, for now, the idea that “banging” a 22-year-old is perceived as a win and examine the broader criticism of Shakira here: she’s bitter. By offering up her own feelings about her romantic life – instead of leaving it to the media and the public – Shakira has deviated from the path we expect women to tread so carefully. Women often have good reason to feel bitter, so why does society shame them for expressing it?
“Bitter is a word casually and easily thrown about to dismiss a woman when she speaks, angrily or not,” says Soraya Chemaly, author of Rage Becomes Her: the power of women’s anger.
In her book, Chemaly argues that women’s anger is never considered societally acceptable. “Teenage girls are spoiled, silly, or moody for standing up for themselves” whereas “older women, fed up and saying so, are bitter castrators.” I asked Chemaly whether she thinks Shakira’s age – at 45, she’s is ten years older than her ex-husband – is relevant to her percieved bitterness.
“I mean, how often do you hear a teenage girl, for example, referred to as ‘bitter’?” asks Chemaly.
She continued, “In this case, it’s easy to throw it into the conversation because of the disparity in age between the women involved. But, also, bitter implies a scowling face, ugliness, and unattractiveness. It’s tinged with the suggestion of depletion and exhaustion.”
In Rage Becomes Her, Chemaly also cites Edén E. Torres’s Chicana Without Apology: The New Chicana Cultural Studies, in which Torres highlights how “Latina women’s emotions are too-often disregarded due to stereotypes that paint them as “hot-blooded and explosive.” It’s possible that as a Columbian woman, Shakira’s anger is being percieved through a fundamentally racist lens.
Academic literature has repeatedly highlighted that an essential function of the label “bitter” is to silence. Lynn McFall defines bitterness as “a refusal to forgive and forget,” adding that “You’re so bitter’ is condemnation, never praise … designed to silence the sufferer (via Losing Hope: Injustice and Moral Bitterness by Katie Stockdale).”
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