"the choice of bell hooks, her great-grandmother, which she put in lowercase letters, said to us that it is not me, Gloria Watkins, who is the most important; it’s what these words are and the model of my great-grandmother Bell Hooks, who stays in my consciousness. And the small letters also captured, I think, bell hooks’s always transgressive oppositional self. So, I’m not going to even use capital letters. I’m not going to use my name. I’m going to use my transgressive great-grandmother’s name on those books...fundamentally, she was a teacher. And by “teacher,” I meant she believed that her audience was broader than the academy or broader than higher education, and she wanted to reach the largest number of people, regular people, young boys, children, that she could. And she wanted to have the broadest impact on the broadest amount of people. And so, when I think of bell hooks, I think about her primarily as a teacher...And she was very much impacted by teachers. She was very much impacted, for example, by the Buddhist person Thich Nhat Hanh. And I think that she saw herself in some ways as a person who would sit with — sit with — young people and community people and students and help them understand this world in which we live, which is full of all kinds of domination. So I see her as a teacher...She was hard-hitting. She was sometimes merciless in her critiques. She was unrelenting. She was courageous. She was in your face. But she was also gentle. And I was just listening to that sort of soft voice, gentle spirit, passionate and always, always trying to tell the truth, from her perspective...She wanted little Black boys to love themselves. She wanted little Black girls with so-called nappy hair to love themselves, which is why she wrote that book about — of being nappy. So we might think about love as a sort of innocuous, trivial, nonpolitical project, but she knew that loving ourselves, all people, but particularly people of color and Black people in the U.S., to love ourselves is a radical political act. And that’s one of the people’s favorite books, All About Love, because I think we understood that, that if you don’t love yourself, if you don’t engage in self-love, you cannot possibly change the world. And so, that was an extremely important intervention in terms of her writings...Her constant naming of imperial white supremacist patriarchy, which can also be framed if we borrow Kimberlé Crenshaw’s term “intersectionality” — bell didn’t use the term “intersectionality.” She wanted us to hear “imperial white supremacist patriarchy” — and later she added “heteropatriarchy” — because she wanted to name what that was. But it is essentially the concept of intersectionality, which goes back to the 19th century Black women, such as Maria Stewart and Ida B. Wells. And so she never stopped saying it, “imperial white supremacist heteropatriarchy,” because she wanted us to hear it over and over and over again so that we could eradicate it...she always insisted, lived the life that she wanted to live, lived it on her own terms."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
LGBT peopleWomen academics from the United StatesSocial activists20th-century African-American womenSocialist feminists
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Beverly Guy-Sheftall, interview with Democracy Now (2021)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Bell_hooks
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Bell hooks
bell hooks (born Gloria Jean Watkins; September 25, 1952 – December 15, 2021), was an American university professor specializing in social criticism focused on groups distinguished by established differences in social power.
80 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Bell hooks →
Related Quotes
"Indeed much of the literature written about black folks in the post-civil rights era emphasized the need for jobs. Ma…"
"To be in touch with senses and emotions beyond conquest is to enter the realm of the mysterious."
"A dangerous form of psychological splitting had to have taken place, and it continues to take place, in the psyches o…"
"The more Lil' Kim distorted her natural beauty to become a cartoonlike caricature of whiteness, the larger her success."
"Revolutionary feminism embraces men who are able to change, who are capable of responding mutually in a subject-to-su…"
"The moment we choose to love we begin to move against domination, against oppression. The moment we choose to love we…"
"Just as I evaluated my students in each class I taught, I evaluated myself. Continual self-evaluation was the experie…"
"Working within an educational system wherein the faculty was 90 percent white and the student body 90 percent non-whi…"
"When television screens had only rare images of black folks, black people were more critically vigilant about these r…"
"All teachers—in every teaching situation from kindergarten to university settings—need time away from teaching at som…"