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There's a difference between calling yourself a bitch and someone else calling you one, certainly, but it is the claim that West made her famous, that Swift cannot stand on her own merits, that is more troubling from the feminist perspective. This is clearly what she took issue with on the leaked call. In the recording she says, "You gotta tell the story the way that it happened to you and the way you experienced it. Like you obviously didn't know who I was before that. It doesn't matter if I sold 7 million of that album before that, which is what happened." Her awareness seems to indicate that West related the gist of the lyric, even if he didn't explicitly ask about calling her "that bitch."This feud, like anything mega-celebrities do, has already become another avenue for monetizing relationships in the age of social-media spectacle. It is, in short, entertainment. With each Snapchat, Instagram, or Twitter post, we should all remember that celebrity feuds are, in actuality, very low stakes: They're filthy rich and will be fine. Still, West's actions toward Swift and her impulse toward playing the victim (while, at the same time, taking potshots) makes you want to keep score. And, if we're being honest, it matters how white women treat black men on such a visible stage. It's a question of representation. Kardashian West, for her part, has perhaps carved out a new sort of white femininity, one that keeps receipts and doesn't back down in defense of blackness.Follow Muna Mire on Twitter.Kardashian West has perhaps carved out a new sort of white femininity, one that keeps receipts and doesn't back down in defense of blackness.