bell hooks

The Will to Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love

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  • ivanilla8has quoted8 days ago
    “Don’t wait until your life is near it’s end to find your feeling, to follow your heart. Don’t wait until it’s too late.”
  • ivanilla8has quoted8 days ago
    Poor and working-class male children and grown men often embody the worst strains of patriarchal masculinity, acting out violently because it is the easiest, cheapest way to declare one’s “manhood.” If you cannot prove that you are “much of a man” by becoming president, or becoming rich, or becoming a public leader, or becoming a boss, then violence is your ticket in to the patriarchal manhood contest, and your ability to do violence levels the playing field.
  • ivanilla8has quoted8 days ago
    Men who win on patriarchal terms end up losing in terms of their substantive quality of life. They choose patriarchal manhood over loving connection, first foregoing self-love and then the love they could give and receive that would connect them to others.
  • ivanilla8has quoted9 days ago
    I realized that this was the first time in my life that I had felt able to really touch my father’s body. I was holding hard to it—with my love—and with my grief. And my grief was partly that my father, whom I loved, was dying. But it was also that I knew already that his death would allow me to feel freer. I was mourning that this had to be so. It’s a grief that is hard for me to speak of. That the only time I would feel free to touch him without feeling threatened by his power over me was when he lay dead—it’s unbearable to me. And I think there can hardly be a woman who hasn’t felt a comparable grief.
  • .has quoted2 months ago
    My reconciliation with my father began with my recognition that I wanted and needed his love—and that if I could not have his love, then at least I needed to heal the wound in my heart his violence had created.
  • em 💌has quoted9 months ago
    No wonder then that male rage is often most directed at women in intimate relationships. Such relationships clearly trigger for many males the anger and rage they felt in childhood when their mothers did not protect them or ruthlessly severed emotional bonds in the name of patriarchy.

    so much of this is in poor taste and is so scapegoaty good lord

  • em 💌has quoted9 months ago
    Whenever women thinkers, especially advocates of feminism, speak about the widespread problem of male violence, folks are eager to stand up and make the point that most men are not violent. They refuse to acknowledge that masses of boys and men have been programmed from birth on to believe that at some point they must be violent, whether psychologically or physically, to prove that they are men.
  • em 💌has quoted9 months ago
    It was as though he felt that I was too powerful, and that perception empowered him to challenge that power, to wound and hurt.
  • em 💌has quoted9 months ago
    Significantly, emotional abuse in families is not just a component of the couple bond; it can determine the way everyone in a family relates.
  • em 💌has quoted9 months ago
    In Harry Potter: The Chamber of Secrets violence when used by the acceptable groups is deemed positive. Sexism and racist thinking in the Harry Potter books are rarely critiqued. Had the author been a ruling-class white male, feminist thinkers might have been more active in challenging the imperialism, racism, and sexism of Rowling’s books.

    check twitter queen people very much dislike jk rowling

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