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<p>By shelz.</p><p>Many current femcees fear the feminist lens.&nbsp; They sell to men and the superficial women who want to be them.&nbsp; There is little critical thought as it would get in the way of their Gucci bags and late night trysts with dudes they met in the club with fat pockets.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t misunderstand.&nbsp; There is a time and place for everything and we all have layers.&nbsp; However, depending solely on the well dressed urban slut role does these emcees a disservice. They must think no one wants to hear a thoughtful female perspective.&nbsp; They must think no one would ever buy into it; buy into them as more than a blow up doll ripe for servicing.&nbsp; They are wrong.</p><p>The most highly acclaimed release from a female emcee ever dealt in the depth of womanhood. It showcased layer after layer of the black female existence.&nbsp; It tackled love, loss, respect, motherhood, sex, education, money and a myriad of other topics. And to this day has sold over 19 million copies.&nbsp; That album is the Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.</p><p>This album was no enigma.&nbsp; Lauryn struck a chord in us all because she spoke her truth.&nbsp; She didn&rsquo;t attack with haughty preachiness. &nbsp;There was protest, but it was swathed in an all encompassing experience; a beautifully personal account that most of us could relate to. And she did it with masterful production (yes, she produced the bulk of the album), perfectly crafted songs and a husky, melodic voice that toggled between rap and R&amp;B with a skill we haven&rsquo;t seen much of since, gender notwithstanding.</p>