Reviews and Comments

nerd teacher [books]

whatanerd@bookwyrm.social

Joined 4 years, 6 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.

This link opens in a pop-up window

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited) No rating

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) No rating

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 …

Kamome Shirahama: Witch Hat Atelier, Vol. 01 (Paperback, 2019, Kodansha Comics)

In a world where everyone takes wonders like magic spells and dragons for granted, Coco …

So far, so cute. I will say the one strange thing is how fast everyone seems to know that Coco conducted forbidden magic without permission but was allowed to keep her memories despite that while becoming an apprentice (because Qifrey wants to know where she got the book from). I wonder if it's just not fully presenting how much time took place between Qifrey helping her escape her house (after she did a spell that turned her mother to stone) and getting to his atelier... Either that, or news moves super fast among witches.

commented on Witch Hat Atelier, Vol. 01 by Kamome Shirahama (Witch Hat Atelier, #1)

Kamome Shirahama: Witch Hat Atelier, Vol. 01 (Paperback, 2019, Kodansha Comics)

In a world where everyone takes wonders like magic spells and dragons for granted, Coco …

So far, so cute. I will say the one strange thing is how fast everyone seems to know that Coco conducted forbidden magic without permission but was allowed to keep her memories despite that while becoming an apprentice (because Qifrey wants to know where she got the book from). I wonder if it's just not fully presenting how much time took place between Qifrey helping her escape her house (after she did a spell that turned her mother to stone) and getting to his atelier... Either that, or news moves super fast among witches.

commented on Will to Change by bell hooks

bell hooks: Will to Change (2004, Simon & Schuster, Limited) No rating

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

Everyone …

Chapter 1 starts off claiming that "females" seek "male love," which I find nonsensical. I am not seeking "male love," and most of the people around me are not specifically seeking "male love." (And when they are, it's not really in this way? It's more that there are men who they love and they want those men to show love in return. Which I do not think is inherently "seeking male love," as the implication is that we're seeking explicitly "male love" because we all need it in some capacity.)

They are, however, seeking the love of people around them and to build spaces where people feel comfortable showing the kinds of care and respect that come along with loving other people. Wanting to be loved by the people around you, wanting to be respected by the people around you... That's not the same thing as specifically seeking …

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

The chapter on death is probably one of the better chapters in the whole book, though I don't think that people are worshiping death as much as they are obsessed with it and their future lack of existence. She does mention that aspect, but it is still done more in the way of people worshiping death...

The next chapter (on healing) has this little bit of total book irony:

I am disturbed by the weighty emphasis on self in so much New Age writing on the topic, and in our culture as a whole.

Because immediately before it is something talking about how we are responsible for our well-being and being open to our salvation (and confessing our brokenness and woundedness).

But also throughout the whole book, it's structured as discussing more intrapersonal ways to learn to love. Yeah, she mentions society and culture, …

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

There are elements of chapter ten that I can take seriously, but when she starts talking about having found/known true love ("I have had a taste of true love") because she had a dream and then went to a conference (because that dream told her she'd meet her true love), and then it ends like this:

As our conversation progressed he told me he was in a committed relationship. I was puzzled and disturbed. I could not believe divine forces in the universe would lead me to this man of my dreams when there was no real possibility of fully realizing those dreams. Of course, those dreams were all about being in a romantic relationship.

... My ability to take it seriously decreases.

I also find that again it lets men off the hook for their behaviours way more than it does women, especially when …

Margaret Cavendish: The Blazing World and Other Writings (1994, Penguin) No rating

Flamboyant, theatrical and ambitious, Margaret Cavendish was one of the seventeenth century's most striking figures: …

Went back to this book to read the second story and ugh. It's all so boring, and I feel like that's its greatest crime. I don't mind the writing style, but it all feels so trite and convoluted... all the time.

I probably would've liked it more had I not read the introduction to this edition... which basically told me how to think about this woman author and her place in the world... rather than just giving me context for why her stories are just like that.

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

It's hard to take this chapter seriously when we get back-to-back Deepak Chopra and Marianne Williamson quotes. These are two people who I wouldn't ever seek out for advice on anything, let alone love. The quotes with Williamson keep referring to listening "to God," and Chopra's just a quack. Both of them have legitimised things that are more in line with conservative values, including hurting sick people.

Most of this chapter also focuses on the harm that has been done to men, but frequently seems to position it as women's responsibility to deal with (in whatever capacity). Women are often said to need to help bring them back onto the path of accepting love but simultaneously receive more blame for boys being socialised into not loving (rather than that finger being pointed squarely at society).

There's this weird line that comes up, and it's just so bizarre:

commented on All About Love by bell hooks

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

I went into chapter eight hoping that it wouldn't bait and switch me with disappointment. It started off as one of the better chapters, but then it just... threw that out the window at the end. Anyway, I think these two claims would've done better earlier on in another chapter:

Replacing the family community with a more privatized small autocratic unit helped increase alienation and made abuses of power more possible.

and

The failure of the patriarchal nuclear family has been utterly documented. Exposed as dysfunctional more often than not, as a place of emotional chaos, neglect, and abuse, only those in denial continue to insist that this is the best environment for raising children.

I also really like that this is a comment that has been made, as it's one that ties in with my frustrations with a world that is …

Louise Heal Kawai, Seicho Matsumoto: Point Zero (EBook, 2024, Bitter Lemon Press)

Enjoyable.

Content warning The topics discussed will ruin the mystery.

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

Chapter seven is making me absolutely insane because it feels like everything is backwards. Though some elements aren't entirely wrong, it feels like there's a failure to actually engage with what she's talking about. A few examples:

The emergence of the “me” culture is a direct response to our nation’s failure to truly actualize the vision of democracy articulated in our Constitution and Bill of Rights.

This fails to recognise the context in which the Constitution and Bill of Rights were developed. I don't know how a "me" culture was created after a handful of white cis men who were largely slavers outlined how the country would work for everyone else for years to come, when it feels like... that is the epitome of a "me" culture (along with anyone who chose to assimilate alongside them along the way).

Our nation fell into the …

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

Chapter six is... largely better than previous chapters, though I still find it lacking in a lot of ways because it just... has a weird focus on a "love ethic." There's also the romanticisation of rural America (no qualifiers) for having communal lives that are being destroyed; I grew up in rural America, and the supposed love ethic that exists there (according to poet Wendell Berry, from Kentucky) is not one that I ever really experienced... because I grew up in a rural community that demanded conformity.

Overall, I don't disagree with a lot of what's written in this chapter, but I find that it... doesn't provide me with much beyond what I already know.

Side note, since I started reading this book as a result of references in some other book about how nonviolence protects the state... Weird to use bell hooks as a pivotal part of …

commented on All About Love by bell hooks

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

A culture that is dead to love can only be resurrected by spiritual awakening.

This chapter and I are going to have a fight because it keeps doing this thing where it (like other parts of the book) claim that the culture we reside in has pushed "lovelessness" as part of it:

Despite overwhelming pressure to conform to the culture of lovelessness, we still seek to know love.

And I'm spending a good amount of time trying to figure out how I missed that culture of lovelessness because I cannot recall a time where I wasn't told (especially in some coercive way) that I needed to love someone. If anything, it was a culture that kept telling me to love too much and in the wrong ways... rather than a culture that told me that love was somehow negative and unwanted.

I …

commented on All About Love by bell hooks

bell hooks: All About Love (2018)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that …

... This book is really frustrating me for its focus on... men. Rather, this book is very situated in the gender binary... But it's also very focused on men, even when it doesn't need to be, and it also alters the reality of those examples (e.g., Bill Clinton creating a space to be publicly shamed and "unmasking" to show that he wasn't really the "good guy" we believed him to be—which is also a bizarre thought because, uh... lots of people knew who Bill Clinton was before he ran for president because he was also the governor of Arkansas, and his record wasn't spotless).

I don't agree with the maxim of "you can't be loved if you don't love yourself" or how we shouldn't expect people to love us in certain ways if we don't love ourselves... I find that troublesome because it doesn't even really engage with all …