Killing Rage: Ending Racism

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Macmillan, 15 oct 1996 - 277 páginas

“hooks’s books help us not only to decolonize our minds, souls, and bodies; on a deeper level, they touch our lives.” —Cornel West
More than two decades before Black Lives Matter and the #MeToo movement roiled America, bell hooks was declaring that abolishing racism and eradicating sexism must go hand in hand. In Killing Rage, one of our premier cultural and social critics brings the Black feminist’s voice to bear on this country’s public discourse on race, redressing the historical shunting of women’s writing in this sphere to the side. In incisive essays, hooks addresses the wide spectrum of topics dealing with race and racism in the United States: friendship between Black women and white women; psychological trauma among African Americans; and internalized racism in movies and the media. hooks tackles the bitter difficulties of racism by envisioning a world without it, sharing a vision where “killing rage”—the fierce anger of Black people stung by repeated instances of everyday racism—offers not only a wellspring of love and strength, but also a realistic catalyst for positive change.
This seminal book is one Americans need today if we’re to remain united tomorrow.
“An angry book that pulls no punches.... Her frankness and willingness to face up to the divisive issues that refuse to go away make her a voice to be reckoned with in the debate on race in America.” —The New York Review of Books

 

Páginas seleccionadas

Índice

Race Talk
1
Militant Resistance
8
Ending Racism
21
Representations of Whiteness in the Black Imagination
31
Accountability and Responsibility
51
Challenging Sexism in Black Life
62
The Integrity of Black Womanhood
77
Its a Black Thing
86
Class Cruelty
163
Class and Commodification
172
A Comment
184
Bonding Beyond Race
196
Keeping a Legacy of Shared Struggle
204
Political Bonding Between Black and White Women
215
Choosing Sides
226
Liberating Subjectivity
240

An AntiRacist
98
The Radical Politics of Mass Media
108
Internalized Racism
119
Liberatory Mental Health Care
133
Loving Blackness as Political Resistance
146
Black SelfDetermination
251
A World Without Racism
263
Selected Bibliography
273
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Sobre el autor (1996)

Bell Hooks was born Gloria Watkins on September 25, 1952. She grew up in a small Southern community that gave her a sense of belonging as well as a sense of racial separation. She has degrees from Stanford University, the University of Wisconsin, and the University of California at Santa Cruz. She has served as a noted activist and social critic and has taught at numerous colleges. Hooks uses her great-grandmother's name to write under as a tribute to her ancestors. Hooks writes daring and controversial works that explore African-American female identities. In works such as Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism and Talking Back: Thinking Feminist, Thinking Black, she points out how feminism works for and against black women. Oppressed since slavery, black women must overcome the dual odds of race and gender discrimination to come to terms with equality and self-worth.

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