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Acclaimed Author and Activist Bell Hooks 1952–2021

Acclaimed Author Bell HooksAcclaimed author and activist Bell Hooks died on Wednesday, December 15. She was 69.

Hooks, whose real name was Gloria Jean Watkins, was born on Sept. 25, 1952, in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. Her first published work, a book of poems titled And There We Wept, was released in 1978. She went on to publish her first book Ain’t I a Woman? Black Women and Feminism in 1981. Hooks wrote under the pen name bell hooks after her great-grandmother Bell Blair Hooks.

Her work includes some 40 books, many of which focused on topics of feminism and race. She was the winner of several awards including the Writer’s Award from the Lila-Wallace—Reader’s Digest Fund and was named one of our nation’s leading public intellectuals by The Atlantic Monthly, according to The Poetry Foundation.

According to the Kentucky Writers Hall of Fame, where she was inducted in 2018, hooks began writing poetry at age 10. As a young person, she developed a strong voice against racism and sexism, which later filtered into her dozens of books and essays on the intersections of race, gender, class, and systems of oppression and power.

Hooks began her groundbreaking book on Black feminism, Ain’t I a Woman as a student at Stanford University, where she graduated in 1973. She went on to earn a master’s degree in English from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and later earned a doctorate in literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her doctoral dissertation was on the author Toni Morrison.

After teaching at UC Santa Cruz, hooks taught African American studies at Yale in 1988 and went on to Oberlin College, where she taught women’s studies. Before settling at Berea College in Kentucky, she also taught at City College of New York.

Over the course of her career, her books introduced many to feminist thought, especially forms of feminism that were more inclusive to the lives and concerns of Black women and women of color. But some of her most influential writing was about love, particularly in a series of books published in the early 2000s.

“I want my work to be about healing,” she said in 2018, according to The Lexington Herald-Leader. “I am a fortunate writer because every day of my life practically I get a letter, a phone call from someone who tells me how my work has transformed their life.”

KPL has created a collection in her honor.

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