Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (South End Press Classics, V. 5)

Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (South End Press Classics, V. 5)

List Price: $16.00
Your Price: $10.88
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: wow!
Review: A fantastic, indispensable book that should be read by everyone who has eyes and half a cerebellum. A great starting point for people who, like me, were interested in feminism but always felt the whole Betty Friedan liberate-the-homemaker aspect they taught us in highschool was a bit shallow, moot, and furthermore nonapplicable to males. Hooks' voice is distinctively wise, startling, discerning, and pragmatic; conceptually, it really makes you view the way society works with new eyes, even if none of the indictments really come as a surprise. Although many readers not predisposed to radical politics may have trouble swallowing all of her ideas in this era of ultra-conservatism, this book really does have something for everybody. It's obvious the reader below calling this book baseless propaganda didn't really understand it, for harmful power hegemonies are still as central to American social and political conduct as when it was first published twenty years ago.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Feminist=Middle Class White Women
Review: I found that after reading this book that I too feel that black women really can't consider themselves feminists. When a feminist says that they want to be equal to their male counterpart, the black women says that they would never want to be equal to a black man. The oppressed black women is really the only person that can complain about anything. White women were not slaves in America during the 19th century. Maybe the meaning of feminist should be change to WhiteFemalism.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Feminist Theory Review
Review: I think it's high time the classics were brought back. Too often these feminists classics have gone out of print, and not available to younger generations. It's as viable today as it was in 1984.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book changed my life twice!
Review: It did. Once as an undergrad and then again when I walked out of my corporate america job to go back to school. I was searching for something else in my life, wanting to quit, and there it was sitting on my shelf as it had for several years. I am a white woman and a lesbian and I must be honest and say I had never really been motivated to action reading anything in feminism, until I read this book. The first chapter takes you by storm. This book is essential for any woman, well for any person. It is an introduction into "things are not always what they seem" and the beginning of viewing the world with a critical eye. Even for us liberals there are many things that we do to contribute to a racists society, knowingly or unknowingly. So I am in graduate school and I have bell hooks to thank for a lot of my motivation to be here. Read this book and read her others(if you can keep up with the number she writes!), she is amazing and inspirational, an Audre Lorde for a new generation who were not fortunate enough to be motivated by the late warrior poet. Hooks challenges us all as Lorde did when she spoke of "doing her work asking you are you doing yours?"

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Needs to start over.
Review: Like bell hooks, I am a feminist. I am also a Chicana. It was a relief to see someone writing about the problem of racism in mainstream feminism. Hooks points out the sad fact that many women can be aware of sexism as a form of oppression, but be oblivious to other prejudices (i.e. racism & classism). She uses testimonial accounts, analysis, and her own personal experiences to paint a too true picture of the ugly side of mainstream feminism. She has shed light on why so many women of color feel uncomfortable, and perhaps unwanted when it comes to feminist activity. Look in your history books. How many photos of Blacks and Mexicans do you see marching for women's rights? Yet we were there, too. Hooks points out that we have been feminists for just as long as white women, but we have been ignored, "marginalized". Her book is honest, courageous, and a great achievement. bell hooks is an amazing writer, and I think those who read this book will also enjoy another of hook's books, "Ending Racism".

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A MUST READ FOR ALL FEMINISTS
Review: Like bell hooks, I am a feminist. I am also a Chicana. It was a relief to see someone writing about the problem of racism in mainstream feminism. Hooks points out the sad fact that many women can be aware of sexism as a form of oppression, but be oblivious to other prejudices (i.e. racism & classism). She uses testimonial accounts, analysis, and her own personal experiences to paint a too true picture of the ugly side of mainstream feminism. She has shed light on why so many women of color feel uncomfortable, and perhaps unwanted when it comes to feminist activity. Look in your history books. How many photos of Blacks and Mexicans do you see marching for women's rights? Yet we were there, too. Hooks points out that we have been feminists for just as long as white women, but we have been ignored, "marginalized". Her book is honest, courageous, and a great achievement. bell hooks is an amazing writer, and I think those who read this book will also enjoy another of hook's books, "Ending Racism".

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Important reading for anyone who loves women
Review: More men should read feminist texts. The world would be a much better place....hopefully. I'm a man, and I love books by Bell Hooks, Adrienne Rich and Alice Walker.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: can be misunderstood
Review: One thing that you must keep in mind while reading this book is that defining "feminist" as white or black is not the issue. There are many feminISTS and I think that some readers would be simplistic by saying that Feminism = white women's issues. While that has certainly been the case with liberal feminism, not all other groups of feminists hold these ideals. Perhaps the issue we need to address is oppression as a WHOLE, thus ending this focus on "issues" feminism. Once we can do this we can finally concentrate on ending oppression for ALL and not waste our time fighting EACH OTHER for the title of "true" feminist.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: don't let so-called 'feminists' intimidate you
Review: This is an important book to read if you consider yourself a feminist but feel marginalized by the strange world of Feminists and Feminist Theory, where there seems to be an established canon.

Let me just say that this is one of the first books I bought in my undergraduate career in 1985, and it's one of the few I still keep in my library, to read when I need to get back on track to continuing to define feminism as it suits MY experience.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Feminist Theory From Margin to Canter
Review: While reading this book one must realize that Hooks' ideas are readily present in every day society. While the reader may want to categorize into white and black Hooks' teaches us not to. This book's ideas about feminism and patriarchy are phenomenal. One of the most influential ideas in the book is how Oppression starts in the family structure- men are generally the head. This is a great book, especially if you are looking for strong feminism arguments that are well-supported.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates