

Come closer and know firsthand what feminist movement is all about. See how feminism can touch and change your life and all our lives.

Part Two will delve into a more detailed application of these ideas, for example to reproductive freedom, and offer a reflection on some of the (very few) aspects of the book that have not withstood the test of time quite as well.Īs hooks exhorts us: “Come closer. Part One will focus on definitions and conceptual clarity. I’ll devote two Digests to Feminism Is for Everybody. One of her many books, Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics, published in 2000, is a short, easy-to-read but rich book that, in her own words, “explain feminist thinking and encourage folks to embrace feminist politics.” In her writing, hooks acknowledged the many ways in which feminism has been maligned or coopted and the justified criticism against various strands of feminism, but she never gave up on feminism as liberatory politics.īell hooks in college with her friend April She died of kidney failure in December 2021 at the all-too-young age of 69. Her writing and teaching reached thousands of students, readers, and activists around the world. Hooks was a beloved professor, known for her wit and honesty. She began her academic career in 1976 teaching English at the University of Southern California, and went on to teach at Stanford, Yale, and the City College of New York, before returning to Kentucky in 2004 to become Distinguished Professor in Residence at Berea College. She wrote 30 books and multiple essays on feminism, racism, masculinity, visual culture, and more. hooks wrote her first book, Ain’t I a Woman? Black Women and Feminism, at the tender age of 19, but did not publish it until she was 29.


bell hooks was the pen name of Gloria Jean Watkins she spelled her name in lowercase to keep the attention on the work, rather than on the author.īorn in 1952 to a working-class family in a small segregated town in Kentucky, hooks obtained a BA in English from Stanford University, an MA in English from the University of Madison-Wisconsin, and a PhD from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Black American writer, feminist theorist, and cultural critic bell hooks did this with verve throughout her life. One of the goals I’ve set for Feminism Makes Us Smarter (FMUS or “famous”), is to share the ideas of feminism with a broader audience. Rereading bell hooks’s Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics
