Current:Home > FinanceSome fans call Beyoncé 'Mother': Here's how she celebrates motherhood on and off stage -Trailblazer Capital Learning
Some fans call Beyoncé 'Mother': Here's how she celebrates motherhood on and off stage
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-07 05:13:53
Mother.
This is what fans all over the world have affectionately dubbed Beyoncé. Whether “mother” or “muva,” the notion is the same.
In fact, the global superstar was declared “Mother of the Year” for 2023 by Grindr, which surveyed over 10,000 users on the popular LGBTQ+ dating app. Using the term "mother" in this way stems from LGBTQ+ ballroom culture; it indicates Beyoncé is a fierce but caring leader of a fandom.
Beyoncé, however, first assumed the title of mother in 2012 when she and Jay-Z welcomed their first daughter, Blue Ivy, who turns 12 on Sunday.
Either way the title is interpreted, Beyoncé has brought motherhood to the forefront of her career.
Beyoncé and femininity
Riché Richardson, professor of African American literature at Cornell University and the Africana Research Center, created a class called "Beyoncénation" to explore her impact on sectors including fashion, music, business, social justice and motherhood.
“Beyoncé has made a profound impact on national femininity,” she says. “It’s interesting because traditionally for Black women, there's been this sense that there are certain hardships that they have encountered [and therefore] marriage and education have been seen as being mutually exclusive.”
Richardson said people sometimes ask whether it's possible for Black women to have it all.
“What is different and exceptional about a newer generation, including people like Beyoncé, is that they don't necessarily see marriage as an obstacle to success or their well-being as women," she says. "In fact, they link it intimately to their possibilities for well-being."
It's a more optimistic view that Black women can make an impact in a range of ways, as professionals and as mothers, Richardson says.
Erik Steinskog, associate professor of musicology at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, echoed the same ideas through an international lens.
Steinskog was compelled to create a Beyoncé course back in 2017 centered on race and gender.
"I, at the time and still, see Beyoncé's 'Lemonade' as one of the masterpieces of the 21st century of music," he says. "I wanted to introduce Black feminism to my students as sort of a contrast to how feminism is often perceived in Europe."
Motherhood on the main stage
Richardson says Beyoncé has always been a renaissance woman and that is emphasized with her latest “Renaissance” album.
Richardson attended the Renaissance World Tour in Atlanta and says woven throughout the concert was a loud embrace of motherhood.
Beyoncé's daughter Blue Ivy danced front and center during her mother's performance of “Black Parade” and "My Power," which includes the lyric "that’s my bloodline on the frontline."
For Richardson, witnessing Beyoncé proudly immersed in mother mode in the middle of her performance was a remarkable part of the show.
“To see [Blue Ivy] with my own eyes come out and to realize that she was just leading, I thought it was about the scripture and 'the little child shall lead them.' And tears came to my eyes," she says. "That was definitely the most moving part for me.”
Steinskog says Beyoncé includes motherhood in a "spectrum" of feminine roles.
"What she wants to do is sort of highlight a number of different ways to be to be a woman or be feminine, including queer femininity, trans femininity," he says.
The "Renaissance" film, which focuses on Beyoncé's family and the inner workings of the Renaissance World Tour, is an extension of this idea. The "Cuff It" signer opens up about balancing her career and being a mother, and gracefully prevailing.
In the film she says, “to balance motherhood and being on the stage, it just reminds me of who I really am.”
Trumpet player Crystal Torres also had a powerful presence on the tour and in the film. Torres performed alongside Beyoncé while visibly pregnant. In the film, Beyoncé highlighted Torres as a mother and musician.
Richardson points out that Beyoncé's close friends and relatives are another indicator that family and motherhood have always been at the core of her career. She says Beyoncé's own relationship with her own mom demonstrates how the importance of the role was instilled in the superstar early on.
“There's so many things to admire in Beyoncé's mother [Tina Knowles], and so it's not really surprising at all that [Beyoncé] is such a good and conscientious mother,” Richardson says.
Follow Caché McClay, the USA TODAY Network's Beyoncé Knowles-Carter reporter, on Instagram, TikTok and X as @cachemcclay.
veryGood! (2949)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- North Carolina field hockey, under 23-year-old coach Erin Matson, wins historic NCAA title
- Stock Market Today: Asian stocks rise following Wall Street’s 3rd straight winning week
- Nightengale's Notebook: What made late Padres owner Peter Seidler beloved by his MLB peers
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- College football Week 12 winners and losers: Georgia dominates, USC ends with flop
- 2 people killed, 3 injured when shots were fired during a gathering at an Oklahoma house, police say
- 3 major ways climate change affects life in the U.S.
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- 5 workers killed, 3 injured in central Mexico after 50-foot tall scaffolding tower collapse
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- NTSB investigators focus on `design problem’ with braking system after Chicago commuter train crash
- Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter captured on kiss cam at Atlanta Braves and Hawks games
- Coping with Parkinson's on steroids, Virginia Rep. Jennifer Wexton navigates exhausting and gridlocked Congress
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Right-wing populist Milei set to take Argentina down uncharted path: ‘No room for lukewarm measures’
- 5 workers killed, 3 injured in central Mexico after 50-foot tall scaffolding tower collapse
- Canned seafood moves beyond tuna sandwiches in a pandemic trend that stuck
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Ahead of Dutch elections, food banks highlight the cost-of-living crisis, a major campaign theme
Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter captured on kiss cam at Atlanta Braves and Hawks games
How America's oldest newlyweds found love at 96
Travis Hunter, the 2
Miss Nicaragua Sheynnis Palacios wins Miss Universe 2023 in history-making competition
George Brown, drummer and co-founder of Kool & The Gang, dead at 74
How to avoid talking politics at Thanksgiving? Consider a 'NO MAGA ALLOWED' sign.