By: Kenneth C. Foxworth
Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder
https://spokesman-recorder.com/

B-Word History and Reclamation: Harm, Power, and Respect
For centuries the B-word was a weapon. Today, in some circles, it’s also a crown.
This piece traces the term’s path from a medieval slur to a modern lightning rod—shaped by race, gender, and who’s speaking.
We explore how Black women have borne the sharpest edge of the word, the 1990s push/pull of pop-culture reclamation (from Queen Latifah to “Queen B”), and why context and consent set the line between solidarity and harm.
Bottom line: know the history, honor boundaries, and protect respect.
The power, pain and history behind a word
For centuries, it was a weapon. Today, it can also be a crown.
The B-word is one of the most complicated pieces of language in American life, especially in African American communities. In some mouths, it’s an insult meant to humiliate. In others, it’s a rallying cry, a title of power, or a bond between friends.
The journey of this word spans medieval England, the women’s suffrage backlash of the early 20th century, the feminist reclamation debates of the 1970s, and the unapologetic swagger of 1990s hip hop. Its meaning shifts depending on tone, context, and, most importantly, who’s speaking it.
From insult to identity
The original meaning of “b****” comes from Old English for “female dog.” By the 1400s, it was being used to insult women’s character. In the U.S., gendered slurs intensified after women won the right to vote in 1920, a way to undermine women’s authority in public life.
For Black women, the sting has always been sharper. Sociologist Patricia Hill Collins describes the “controlling images,” like the “Jezebel” or “Sapphire,” that have historically painted Black women as hypersexual or angry. The B-word often carries those racialized stereotypes.
Pop culture and reclamation
The 1990s brought the word into the spotlight.
In 1993, Queen Latifah’s Grammy-winning “U.N.I.T.Y.” demanded respect with the hook, “Who you callin’ a b****?” Around the same time, Lil’ Kim styled herself as “Queen B,” turning the insult into a persona of dominance and sexual agency.
Writers like Joan Morgan popularized “hip hop feminism,” arguing that you can love the culture, challenge its sexism, and still claim space in its language. But even in reclamation, the line between empowerment and harm is thin.
Boundaries matter
Every woman I interviewed agreed: A man should never call a woman he loves the B-word. “It hits different when it comes from a man,” one said. “It’s not your word to use.”
Even woman-to-woman, the word isn’t a free-for-all. In trusted circles, it can mean solidarity. Outside them, it can start a fight.
The future of the word
In classrooms, youth programs, and households, conversations about this word are happening more often. Some choose to reclaim it. Others reject it completely. Most agree that the key is knowing the history, honoring boundaries, and protecting respect.
The B-word is both wound and shield, collar and crown. Before judging it, understand it. Before speaking it, know the weight it carries.

