bell hooks (1952–2021) was an American scholar, cultural critic, and educator. Born Gloria Jean Watkins, she chose her pen name (after her great-grandmother Bell Blair Hooks) and insisted on lowercase spelling to center attention on her work rather than her person.
Core ideas
- Engaged pedagogy: extends Freire’s critical pedagogy by insisting that teachers must be actively committed to their own self-actualization and must recognize students as whole people, not just minds (hooks, 1994).
- Education as freedom: hooks treated the classroom as a site where domination could be challenged — through voice, vulnerability, and mutual recognition.
- Intersectionality of oppression: her work consistently addressed how race, gender, and class interact in educational settings and cultural production.
- Community and care: hooks emphasized the role of care, community, and emotional honesty in pedagogy — qualities often dismissed as unrigorous.
Notable works
- Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom (1994)
- Teaching Community: A Pedagogy of Hope (2003)
- Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (1984)
- All About Love: New Visions (2000)
Related
- Paulo Freire — her primary intellectual predecessor in pedagogy
- dialogic education — the tradition she extended
hooks, bell. (1994). Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom. Routledge.