The will to change Men, masculinity, and love

bell hooks, 1952-

Book - 2004

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2nd Floor 305.31/Hooks Due May 7, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Atria Books 2004.
Language
English
Main Author
bell hooks, 1952- (author)
Edition
1st Atria Books hardcover ed
Physical Description
188 p. ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780743456074
  • Preface: About Men
  • 1. Wanted: Men Who Love
  • 2. Understanding Patriarchy
  • 3. Being a Boy
  • 4. Stopping Male Violence
  • 5. Male Sexual Being
  • 6. Work: What's Love Got to Do with It?
  • 7. Feminist Manhood
  • 8. Popular Culture: Media Masculinity
  • 9. Healing Male Spirit
  • 10. Reclaiming Male Integrity
  • 11. Loving Men
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A companion to We Real Cool: Black Men and Masculinity (Forecasts, Nov. 10), hooks's 23rd book for adults is a fierce, quirky denunciation of patriarchy and a clarion call to the uncommitted to align themselves with visionary radical feminism. In 12 slim chapters, hooks examines the stages of a man's life, from babyhood through boyhood to the teenage years into manhood. She finds patriarchy plays a role in most socio-sexual ills, as boys and men seek alienating sex as a substitute for the love that often seems, because of demands on families that destroy them or keep them from forming, unavailable to men: "Sex, then, becomes for most men a way of self-solacing. It is not about connecting to someone else but rather releasing their own pain." The men who can lead us out of patriarchal chains are "men of color from poor countries, men who live in exile, men who have been victimized by imperialist male violence"-the Dalai Lama for example. While she calls Will Smith films such as Men in Black and Independence Day tools of the patriarchy, hooks saves her big guns for J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter books, scornfully exposing them as foisted on us by "rich white American men" and no more than updated version of the British schoolboy books that fueled the fantasies of Victoria's empire. A better book to buy for children, she suggests, might be her own recent Be Bop Buzz. Hooks is always readable, but her takes on mass media here have a retro ring to them. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved