A controversial public intellectual speaks her mind.
This collection of seven interviews with prominent Black feminist, activist, and theorist bell hooks (1952-2021), introduced by diversity consultant and essayist Mikki Kendall, reveals the evolution of hooks’ thought from 1989 to 2017 as she reflected on important social and political issues of her time. In 1978, hooks, a college professor of English, changed her name from Gloria Jean Watkins as a way of affirming her identity—and honoring a feisty ancestor. “Gloria Jean, given to me—really reflects how much my parents wanted me to be a very feminine, Southern belle type girl,” hooks told an interviewer, “and I think that in order to find my voice and use it, I had to use the name of my great-grandmother on a maternal side—bell hooks—in order to bring a self into being that my parents and my home were not nurturing.” That self comes across as caring, passionate, and defiant; in more than 30 books and public presentations, hooks has been likely to “hit raw nerves, delving into the possibilities of culture as a place of resistance to white supremacy, capitalism and patriarchy.” Hooks contextualizes many of her books, including Where We Stand: Class Matters, Feminism Is for Everybody, and even her children’s book Happy To Be Nappy. She discusses her eagerness to reach audiences outside of academia, which once led her to appear on the Ricki Lake talk show, where, she admitted, she was “treated like shit.” The interviews range over many topics, including hip-hop, Buddhism, sex, love, gender, lesbianism, the environment, the meaning of intersectionality, and capitalism. “Any system that encourages us to think about interdependency, and to be able to use the world’s resources in a wiser way, for the good of the whole,” hooks asserts, “would be better for the world than capitalism.”
A candid self-portrait of an important 20th-century thinker.