The Columbus Dispatch

Bell hooks left mark in Greater Columbus

- Your Turn Judson L. Jeffries Guest columnist

bell hooks, the prolific author, hugely popular academic and sought-after lecturer died last Wednesday in the small town of Berea, Kentucky, home to a small liberal arts college that rests approximat­ely 39 miles south of the University of Kentucky in Lexington.

In the days since hooks transition­ed, obituaries have flooded my inbox from friends and colleagues on the east and west coasts who call themselves keeping me informed of the country’s latest developmen­ts.

I’m used to this, as it’s been this way since my family, and I moved to Columbus 15 years ago.

For reasons unknown to me, my colleagues and friends seem to be under the impression that central Ohio is somehow off the news grid.

At any rate, in nearly all of the obituaries that I received, hooks is framed as this groundbrea­king feminist. True, but she was much more than that. In the areas of race, class, sex and gender, hooks had few peers.

On that front, hooks was easily, among the most profound intellectu­als of the last 40 years, along with other scholars such as Kimberly Williams Crenshaw, Cornel West, Patricia J. Williams, Derrick Bell, Angela Davis and Cedric Robinson.

hooks’ 1981 book “Ain’t I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism” is required reading in my major readings in African American and African Studies course.

The text explores the impact of racism of sexism and racism on Black women, the modern civil rights movement, and both the feminist and women’s suffrage movements.

In sum, hooks maintains that racist and sexist socializat­ion has conditione­d women to downplay, and to some text, devalue their own femaleness, thus, inadverten­tly of course, participat­ing in their own oppression.

Over the next four decades, hooks produced more than 30 books on topics as wide-ranging as poetry, media, history, art, and love.

hooks’ works reflected her intellectu­al versatilit­y, exhibiting a strong familiarit­y with fields of academic inquiry outside of the areas in which she earned her degrees, blending them in a way that produced cutting-edge, thought provoking and mind-bending scholarshi­p.

Strongly influenced by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., as a youngster, it is not surprising that hooks’ works incorporat­ed matters such as diversity, love, freedom, and justice in the same way that King’s work and writings did.

Think the Beloved Community here. Surprising­ly, central Ohio news media failed to mention in any significan­t manner hooks’ stops at the Ohio State University, where she was a scholarin-residence over the course of three years.

From 2010 to 2013, when she was a visiting distinguis­hed professor of the then-department of Women’s Studies (now the Department of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies), hooks gave talks, was interviewe­d and facilitate­d lectures and seminars with OSU faculty and students in a number of department­s, centers and offices.

hooks died, after a lengthy illness, at the age of 69.Her imprint on academia is both undeniable and far-reaching. Few works have influenced a generation of scholar-activists, as has hooks’ writings. She’s gone, but her scholarshi­p and example serve as a template to those intellectu­als who endeavor to think outside the box, but more importantl­y, change the world.

Judson L. Jeffries is professor of African American and African Studies at Ohio State University. He has published widely on police-community relations, urban uprisings and the politics of state repression.

 ?? UNIVERSITY MARK SIMONS/PURDUE ?? Author, academic, activist and lecturer bell hooks, who was a scholar-in-residence at Ohio State University from 2010 to 2013, died Dec. 15, after a lengthy illness. She was 69.
UNIVERSITY MARK SIMONS/PURDUE Author, academic, activist and lecturer bell hooks, who was a scholar-in-residence at Ohio State University from 2010 to 2013, died Dec. 15, after a lengthy illness. She was 69.
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