These books aren’t fictional? Bell Hooks is an academic who’s been making papers on black rights since the 70s and basically created the groundwork for intersectional feminism.
All About Love offers radical new ways to think about love by showing its interconnectedness in our private and public lives. In eleven concise chapters, hooks explains how our everyday notions of what it means to give and receive love often fail us, and how these ideals are established in early childhood. She offers a rethinking of self-love (without narcissism) that will bring peace and compassion to our personal and professional lives, and asserts the place of love to end struggles between individuals, in communities, and among societies. Moving from the cultural to the intimate, hooks notes the ties between love and loss and challenges the prevailing notion that romantic love is the most important love of all.
And The Red Deal is a publication by an indigenous movement that’s focused on anti-imperialist education.
The Red Deal is a call for action beyond the scope of the US colonial state. It’s a program for Indigenous liberation, life, and land—an affirmation that colonialism and capitalism must be overturned for this planet to be habitable for human and other-than-human relatives to live dignified lives. The Red Deal is not a response to the Green New Deal, or a “bargain” with the elite and powerful. It’s a deal with the humble people of the earth; a pact that we shall strive for peace and justice and a declaration that movements for justice must come from below and to the left.
Both books would probably be fairly decent intros to understanding the politics of PoC in the US.
Any particular reason? I have to restart The Left Hand of Darkness because I dropped the first time around, but I thought it was quite interesting nonetheless.
Yeah, like, novels that have strong leftist messages I think.
These books aren’t fictional? Bell Hooks is an academic who’s been making papers on black rights since the 70s and basically created the groundwork for intersectional feminism.
And The Red Deal is a publication by an indigenous movement that’s focused on anti-imperialist education.
Both books would probably be fairly decent intros to understanding the politics of PoC in the US.
@Makan@lemmygrad.ml
Wasn’t that Angela Davis or…?
Eh
She did do a lot of work in that, but quite a few citations in her work include Hooks.
oh okay
Hopefully there’s not too much analysis of Ursula Le Guin.
…She was anti-Soviet and I hate her aside from that.
Maybe unpopular opinion, but A Wizard of Earthsea was maybe the most disappointing, boring book I’ve ever read.
I hate Le Guin, tbh
Any particular reason? I have to restart The Left Hand of Darkness because I dropped the first time around, but I thought it was quite interesting nonetheless.
She was anti-Soviet.