Bell Hooks Essay

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    Keeping Close to Home by bell hooks Bell hooks’ “Keeping Close to Home” an excerpt from “Talking Back” published in 1989 is a significant piece of literature as it’s timeless views are still relevant to humanity today. Amongst the essay’s careful construction, strong opinions and clear perspectives evoke in the reader the urge to agree, ponder and question hooks’ thoughts to form their own response. The reader is informed of hooks’ experiences in her journey of life as a member of a proletarian

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    "Understanding Patriarchy” by Bell Hooks, the ideology of patriarchy is presented to her audience while she explains some of the basics of feminism and how they relate to current challenges to gender roles. Hook begins the article by establishing her relevance to the topic by giving specific examples of her childhood living in a patriarchal home. She explains in detail some of the occurrences growing up in an isolated area in a home with patriarchal views and how they affected her. Hook then transitions into

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    "When we love the Earth, we are able to love ourselves more fully" (Hooks 968). This is the first sentence that Bell Hooks uses in the reading of "Touching the Earth," that essentially summarizes the article. The obvious language being that the Earth can bring unity between others and the Earth brings a sense of comfort when connected with itself. The article "Touching the Earth" effectively portrays the necessity of staying in touch with the Earth by providing strong quotations from experienced

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    The most traits bell hooks admire about her father is although he was not educated she admired his “diligence and hard work, approaching tasks with a seriousness of concentration” she admired how hard working and serious was about his job and family. also later on her paragraph bell hooks says “I work to mirror and develop with a discipline I struggle to maintain,” hooks father lived by a disciple which she applied to her academic life, also in the long run which it has helped her because as a writer

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    The inclusion of Black women in the conversation of feminism is based on white women not believing that black women are as oppressed. In the Bell Hooks reading she talks about her experience as a black woman observing feminism from the white women perspective, which is very one-sided. White women are not aware of their bias and the fact that what they experience as unequal as women isn't representative of every woman, especially as far as race. There are still barriers between the black women and

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    The author, Bell Hooks, claims in her article, “Touching the Earth,” that when the black Americans renew their spiritual relationship with the earth, they will discover self-healing. Hooks starts her article with the idea that loving the earth allows us to fully love ourselves. Hooks states that both the Native Americans and Africans shared respect towards “life-giving” nature and of the earth; they would help one another remember that everyone owned the land despite what the white men believed

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    In reading bell hooks’ opinion about sexism and misogyny I had to admit to myself that I had no idea what she meant by sexism and misogyny. So, to accurately know what she was referring to, I looked them up on the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. For the word sexism, I found there were two meanings that support hooks’ ideas: 1: prejudice or discrimination based on sex; especially: discrimination against women and 2: behavior, conditions, or attitudes that foster stereotypes of social roles based

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    together forming a melting pot of their differences. This is seen in bell hooks, A Revolution of Values: The Promise of Multi-Cultural Change when she talks about the desegregation of her high school. In this she talks about her best friend Ken who was a white male and took risks to befriend her. This essay talks about the struggles of being African-American and a female during a rough point in American history, but what bell hooks really wants the reader to understand, is the importance of friendship

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    The theories of Laura Mulvey and Bell Hooks share their views on how individuals who attend the cinema have the opportunity to gaze and interrupt the messages that are being portrayed. Based upon their views, spectators can have their own beliefs and views of life and not have to focus on societal practices of racism and sexism. The article “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” critiqued by Mulvey, focused on how sexism and voyeurism were the main theme in terms of how males dominated society

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    Bell Hooks describes this phenomenon of "getting a bit of the Other…" as a ritual of transcendence, a more fulfilling way of doing and feeling that supersedes the norm. Hooks' main thought in the essay expresses that those who are of the dominant society are enticed by the exoticness of the "Other" (p.21). The "Other" being anyone in the minority - anyone considered "different" from the mainstream society. Others are not only different, but rather inferior to those who deem those to be the "Others"

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