nerd teacher [books] commented on Will to Change by bell hooks
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? …
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? Perhaps it does (she gives no examples of what she means here—the scenes I remember most frequently are people retaliating to violence done against them... but there are probably examples of vengeance being done). On top of this, she also doesn't provide any kind of nuanced discussion of violence and implies that it is always bad. She doesn't think about the strategic use of violence (as a means to support other aspects of life), and she tosses in this bold parenthetical:
(More and more girls who embrace patriarchal thinking also embrace the notion that they must be violent to have power.)
This is completely refusing to engage with how women might use violence. There's a lot of nuanced discussion to have here, and she just... doesn't. I get that it's a book about men, but the kinds of violence that might be used by oppressed and marginalised groups... may have differences from when dominant groups use it against them. I refuse to claim all violence is bad, especially when we can't even accurately define what violence actually is in society.
There's also this weird bit about how Harry Potter was marketed primarily to boys? Which doesn't make sense because Bloomsbury started publishing it after the editor made his daughter test-read it. What she might want to say is that she was told to use a more neutral name because "boys won't read books by women." This might have actually helped bell hooks' argument that she ignored, too! Which is this constant refrain of [cis] boys needing male role models but never considering that no one says the same thing about non-cis boys. Trans boys and trans girls are never said to need relevant trans role models (except as representation in media! never anywhere else); non-binary and agender kids are never said to need relevant non-binary and agender role models; [cis] girls aren't really said to need female role models. But boys always need male role models... Why is that? Why do children of other genders manage to find role models in people of different genders? Why doesn't bell hooks mention this? (JKR would be a terrible role model for anyone, but we weren't aware of just how horrible she would show herself to be in 2004.)
There's also this anecdote about single moms enabling patriarchal patterns because they have "no time." In it, she talks about how her friend was parenting her son to do what he liked (use his middle name, which was Ruby; paint his nails) by either showing all the men named Ruby who did cool things to the children at her son's school or calling the "cool" adult men to come show that he could do it when his male peers told him he couldn't and made fun of him. She was only able to do this during graduate school (when she... had more time???), and this stopped when she started working (because she lacked time). I feel like it would prompt a huge question: Did her community just... vanish, leaving her and her son to fend for themselves entirely on their own? Or did they exist in the first place? It's a weird anecdote, but it should prompt more questions about what alternatives we could have... and doesn't. It just throws those questions on the ground and runs from them.





