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nerd teacher [books]

whatanerd@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 7 months ago

Exhausted anarchist and school abolitionist who can be found at nerdteacher.com where I muse about school and education-related things, and all my links are here. My non-book posts are mostly at @whatanerd@treehouse.systems, occasionally I hide on @whatanerd@eldritch.cafe, or you can email me at n@nerdteacher.com. [they/them]

I was a secondary literature and humanities teacher who has swapped to being a tutor, so it's best to expect a ridiculously huge range of books.

And yes, I do spend a lot of time making sure book entries are as complete as I can make them. Please send help.

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Kate Bornstein: Gender Outlaw (1995, Vintage Books) No rating

Part coming-of-age story, part mind-altering manifesto on gender and sexuality, coming directly to you from …

There are some interesting bits about 'being the fool' (like a jester or a trickster), especially as Bornstein sees them as the people who question society. As a weirdo who has always been interested in jesters, especially in modern fictional portrayals, I find this to make sense.

Though, it does come off a bit clunky and confusing. The original version is quippy and amusing, even if not entirely something I agree with. The new version struggles under both a call back to Bornstein's work on I Am Cait (with Caitlyn Jenner), where it feels more sinister than it's probably intended as a result of today's political landscape:

I had the great good fortune to accompany Caitlyn Jenner and company as a regular cast member of E! TV’s reality series I Am Cait. It was one of the very best times of my life. I remember at …

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Rubbish.

This book is rubbish, and it's nothing short of constantly reinforcing the so-called masculinity it claims it wants to dismantle.

I've effectively made an essay for each chapter in the book comments here, but I just... I cannot with this book. I have always wondered why it is that I see so many abusive men, especially abusive men who claim to be "progressive" or "radical leftists" or "anarchists," promoting it and utilising it in their screeds that support abuse apologia... And now I know why.

Every claim comes with zero references or citations. When she does cite someone, they're frequently conservative white men. One of them was a former associate and romantic partner of Ayn Rand (Nathaniel Branden), while two others were Oprah-promoted "therapists" who comment on the attractiveness of their patients (Terrence Real and John Bradshaw)... Or another interesting one is Michael Kimmel (but that's because he …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 11. I'm finished. I don't want to write a long review, so I'm probably going to keep the essay to the chapter comment.

This chapter... I have a headache. She keeps doing this thing where, though she sometimes will critique the hyperfocus of US culture on the nuclear family, she places the responsibility for everything squarely within the nuclear family. It's like she can't decide if she wants to critique it (she doesn't in this book) or support it, and she routinely ignores... any aspect of communal child-rearing and communal support of families. It's a bit bizarre, and this is especially true because of her gross fascination with boys always needing male role models (if they don't have them at home, what about communal care? she avoids this conversation, and her work maintains a weird position on the role of parents).

She then drops this paragraph on …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 10. One more to go, ugh.

Snarky comment: I'm starting to think that bell hooks genre of "feminism" should be "Oprah Book Club Feminism," which isn't feminist at all.

She keeps referencing ~therapists~ who are highly questionable and have been supported by Oprah, like Terrence Real and John Bradshaw... both of whom seem to mention, in their books, the attractiveness of their patients (especially female). Or, and this is my favourite one, Nathaniel Branden! Who was a former associate and romantic partner of Ayn Rand. And once again, she references Gary Zukav and Linda Francis.

Seriously, the people she chooses to quote or reference... it is fucking wild that anyone would perceive this book as even a glimmer of being radical or visionary. (Yet, at no point will she actually cite or reference studies or researchers or anything of that nature.)

Imagine if …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 9 makes me want to throw the book, except I'm reading an ebook on my computer... so I don't think I should do that.

A few parts of this chapter are completely recognisable to me, and that's because they are parts that I've seen both abusive radical men (such as a certain anarcho-celebrity) and Men's Rights Activists referencing... as a way to avoid taking responsibility for their own actions. You see, it's because:

Many men in our society have no status, no privilege; they receive no freely given compensation, no perks with capitalist patriarchy.

Which is bullshit, even if you buy in to the logic of what she's saying. It's bullshit because it doesn't matter if they "don't have status." Cis men (because, let's face it, she's not here talking about any other kind of men) hold status over people of marginalised genders; though …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 8 has so much wrong with it, and most of that comes down the fact that watching and reading things is a skill. There are so many fundamentally incorrect analyses about movies and children's shows here that it's beyond ridiculous. It's to the point that I feel like I'm being gaslit about these pieces of media because, if you actually pay attention to many of the pieces... Many of their story arcs for core characters... support the exact "redefining masculinity" that you'd think she'd want to see happen.

Again, no fucking sources. Citing sources was too hard, I guess. (And now that I've also seen people say that "she proved" things in this book while trying to hunt down fucking sources that might have even been used while she wrote the damned thing... it makes me hate this book even more. She has proven nothing here …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 7! And I feel like I'm losing my mind because of so many repeated things.

First is my common refrain: Why does she provide no evidence of claims she makes? And why do her claims sound so reactionary even as she claimed them to be part of a visionary feminism? For example:

Starting in early childhood, males need models of men with integrity, that is, men who are whole, who are not divided against themselves. While individual women acting as single mothers have shown that they can raise healthy, loving boys who become responsible, loving men, in every case where this model of parenting has been successful, women have chosen adult males—fathers, grandfathers, uncles, friends, and comrades—to exemplify for their sons the adult manhood they should strive to achieve.

There is no source for this. Do we know that the successful single mothers "choose …

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

One of the most exhausting things about this book is that she flippantly says shit for a sentence and then moves on like there's nothing to discuss, and it really pisses me off.

Sometimes they're really interesting things that could be expanded upon, other times it's that she just drops a few ideas into one place as if the paragraph can support all of them despite the fact that she... hasn't addressed any of them. Then there are times where she drops two contradicting sentences next to each other (or if not contradicting sentences, then they don't actually support each other).

An example of all of these is this bit that talks about how "no one has really tried to examine what men feel about the loss of time with children, partners, loved ones, and the loss of time for self-development," which is immediately followed with mentioning Susan …

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 5 hit me with a quasi-bait and switch where it started off reasonable and then just hit some notes that are incredibly... baffling for a book that is a "feminist" look at men. It's perpetually infuriating because there are a lot of truthful statements that are buried under a lot of things that make me ask "What the hell?" because they come out of nowhere.

At first, it started with addressing the common stereotypes of how men only think about sex and the ways in which they view it... and then it just throws any attempts to engage with these stereotypes, how pervasive they are, etc straight into the nearest bin and opts to discuss some very weirdly framed things.

Like how mothers "do not like" or "don't know what to do with" their sons' penises and that they don't communicate to their boys that their penises …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

The absolute lack of specific examples and the overreliance upon vague notions of things existing annoys me. The first example of this in Chapter 4 happens at the precise beginning:

Every day in America men are violent. Their violence is deemed “natural” by the psychology of patriarchy... This thinking continues to shape notions of manhood in our society despite the fact that it has been documented that cultures exist in the world where men are not violent in everyday life, where rape and murder are rare occurrences.

What are these documented cultures? Do you want your audience to learn anything? Why not cite them? Why not point to them?

There are a bunch of times this happens, and a lot of it is tied to victim-blaming structures of "analysis." This bit is tied to how women stand by and watch their sons get brutalised (and …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

I find it really hard not to be annoyed at this book and the structure it takes, and I also find it so obnoxious that there are so many places where she could cite examples and... chooses not to. Sometimes I wonder if it's because it requires actually looking for it, and sometimes I wonder if it's because the anecdote is only half true. You'd think an academic would, I don't know, cite things more often.

Part of my annoyance comes from the fact that I'm like "Yeah, that's a true sentiment," and then I'm annoyed because she relies on super ahistorical nonsense to make her point (edit: see later, not the next point).

Like, okay. I hate JKR and her horrible wizard book of bigotry, but the fact that she says it "glorifies violence as long as the right side does it" is a bit weird? …

Seicho Matsumoto: Inspector Imanishi Investigates (Paperback, 2024, Penguin Books) No rating

Tokyo, 1960. As the first rays of morning light hit the rails at Kamata Station, …

Something I hate about this printing of the book (or maybe it's all printings? I only have this one) is that they italicise the honorific '-san' (and I'd guess all the others, too? haven't encountered others). They do it because it's ~foreign~, but it reads more like a bunch of snarky jerks sneering the honorific at each other. I wish English books would stop this nonsense of italicising other language terminology; it's so obnoxious and dated.

Anyway, I like the story thus far.

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 2. I was going to read two chapters before bed, but I'm stopping here because I keep wanting to shake my head.

Overwhelmingly, I don't disagree with the premise that patriarchy is responsible for men's pain. It definitely has a lot of responsibility for it. However, I find it hard to take this chapter seriously in many ways because I've... seen GamerGate, the many trials of women against their abusers (especially high-profile queer women) and the public smear campaigns that their former partners put them (and sometimes their children) through, the trials of women against abusive non-partner men in their lives and those smear campaigns, the way that abusive men are able to weasel out of responsibility for their actions (frequently by partnering with more conservative men who support them), the creation of various men's rights and manosphere projects (which solely blame feminism for their problems)... and people …

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited)

Feminist writing did not tell us about the deep inner misery of men.

Everyone …

Chapter 2. I was going to read two chapters before bed, but I'm stopping here because I keep wanting to shake my head.

Overwhelmingly, I don't disagree with the premise that patriarchy is responsible for men's pain. It definitely has a lot of responsibility for it. However, I find it hard to take this chapter seriously in many ways because I've... seen GamerGate, the many trials of women against their abusers (especially high-profile queer women) and the public smear campaigns their former partners or other abusive men have put them (and sometimes their children) through, the creation of various men's rights and manosphere projects (which solely blame feminism for their problems)... and people focusing on this so-called "male loneliness epidemic" when... Oh, right, it's an everyone loneliness epidemic called alienation.

So when I see her also blame feminism for not taking men's pain seriously, it's a difficult …