bell hooks: Moving from Pain to Power I The New School

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Published 2015-10-12
Join bell hooks, Marci Blackman, and Darnell Moore in a discussion sponsored by Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts (www.newschool.edu/lang) at The New School (www.newschool.edu/) on confronting loss and moving from pain to power.

Marci Blackman is an author, her first novel, Po Man’s Child, received the American Library Association’s Stonewall Award for Best Fiction and the Firecracker Alternative Book Award for Best New Fiction. Her second novel, Tradition was noted as one of Band of Thebes best books of 2013.

Darnell L. Moore is a Senior Editor at MicNews and Co-Managing/Editor at The Feminist Wire. Along with NFL player Wade Davis II, he co-founded YOU Belong, a social good company focused on the development of diversity initiatives.

bell hooks is an author, activist, feminist and scholar-in-residence at The New School. This fall is her fifth and final week-long visit in a three-year residency.

Location:
Wollman Hall, Eugene Lang College
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
6:30 pm to 8:00 pm

All Comments (21)
  • @steveharper8451
    If your purpose is to be right, blame the other. If your purpose is to empower yourself, take responsibility. If your purpose is to learn, find humility. If your purpose is to heal yourself, share and understand your pain. If your purpose is to connect with others, love yourself. If you cannot love yourself, then perhaps you will learn to on a path of fulfilling your own unique and powerful center. Our own healing is the greatest gift each of of us has to offer this world.
  • @bluemanzanita
    Each individual is an accomplished writer and speaker, yet what strikes me is their exquisite ability to actively listen to each other. It is a beautiful thing to witness!
  • Bell Hooks is brilliant. She understands the subtleties of language and how we perceive ourselves within our cultural context. She's a national treasure!
  • @newleft2254
    Just wanted to add my own psychoanalytic perspective. Winnicott wrote about the 'good enough parent' and how important it was to not be neglectful but also to not be too good. Parents who are too good, who are too attentive, who say yes to everything are not preparing their children for the real world. I think the best thing we can do for our children is to be a strong base and allow them to venture and meet with disappointment. Teach them resilience. That, to me, is the most important trait in a human being - resilience. The best way to do that is to talk to them in a way where you are conscious that one day, your voice will be their voice of reason. The voice in their head. Love you, bell hooks <3
  • @marilynvans9044
    I never heard of Bell Hooks, I am simply blown away😱. Good god let me catch my breath...💕.
  • @XAudreyS
    Bell thank you for existing and overcoming the struggles in your life. I am inspired by you and realized I too can overcome. I will be my best self for myself and for others.
  • @Sarah-jz6qd
    So much good stuff in here. So much. Being a kid from domestic violence and drug use, this was some really good stuff to think about.
  • @sshuck
    Most of my intellectual heroes are white males (Chomsky etc.). Maybe that has something to do with my own being a white male. Who knows. But bell hooks is definitely among my heroes, and what I find surprising is that I've never seen her name mentioned alongside any of them. They always talk about and express admiration for each other, but bell hooks is out there, "geographically" isolated, even though her dissident ideas (despite details like particular focus, terminology, tone, etc.) seem very compatible.
  • @carlstanley970
    I can't believe I'm just now finding out about you sister you are amazing
  • @darlenep422
    Great insight and touching on topics not just for black Americans but for the self.
  • @LoveAlwaysKeli
    Wow, Marci had the same dialogue I've had, to tell people my parents are black and the same as my grandparents. I hadn't even thought of my great grands. Same. And to even explain it, is something I have stopped doing. What difference does it make right? Looove this thank you!
  • @jxixikiki2374
    the healing is through forgiveness to reach love, only to forgive in order to regain self respect and love.
  • @CINEMATIQmagTV
    I am having moments of utter disguise for Bell Hooks and her referenced experiences and perspective she had with/for black people yet determined to continue listening.
  • @WBFbySteefen
    approximately 56:00 "my success with relationships with Black men is hard. I'm not blaming it on the crabs (as he points, generally, towards his crotch)" WTF? then he talks about a barrel. A barrel of crabs? Whaaaa?
  • @Loud2013
    Great non profit "blame community and self" rhetoric! Like, you know? Right? So, fer meeeEee... you know, right?? Let's have a conversation, like, umm, you know, right, maybe???