Bell Hooks (American author)
Hi, I want to tell the mothers and sisters of this country. By uniting and calling for a fight, this is how to break the prison. ' Before that, the realization of the upliftment of Stri Shudras came to Maharashtra from Phule. In the United States, however, the women's movement and the African-American movement, which did not even have universal suffrage until 1964, seemed to be two different streams. Bell Hooks is one of the most important writers in the field.
Bell Hooks (real name Gloria Jean Watkins), author of more than 38 books on a wide range of topics, including black women, men's perspectives, movement issues, egalitarian education values, retired on 15 December. The author, who used her grandmother's nickname at the tender age of 19, wrote the book "I'm a Woman" when only white women appeared in the feminist movement in the United States in 1971. It was published ten years later (1981). Without stopping to emphasize the duality of racial and gender discrimination against African-American women, she went on to explain how the movement should look at black women, and more books were written about it. Take a closer look at the world around you, review the evolving forms of culture, get the ideological energy out of it, he said. Based on a poem by African-American poet Gwendolyn Brooks, Bell Hooks explores in his book,
We Real Cool, the motivations behind how even young men who are nicknamed 'Negroes' want to express their youthful vigor! But he also wrote 23 articles from time to time about the constant attacks on this community; They were embedded in the 'Killing Rage'. He explored the social, mental and philosophical dimensions of the very private experiences of love-loving couples' language, motherhood, suspicion, quarreling and divorce in his two books' All About Love 'and' Salvation '.
Oprah Winfrey also conveys the message 'Love conquers the world'; But Bell Hooks' writing is different it explores the hurdles, the pitfalls, and the negative, pessimistic tone that Bell Hooks does.
Critics have lamented that his writing is "too personal." But Bell Hooks, the feminist movement's slogan "Personal is Political", not only makes politics personal, but also enriches philosophical experiences about society. His two books, Teaching Community and Teaching to Transgress, are American teachers' guides. Given that Bell Hooks' higher education was in English literature, there is a strong connection between language and life!
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