Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T10:39:08.422Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Black Women and the Intersectional Politics of Experience - Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center. By bell hooks. New York: Routledge, [1984] 2015. 180 pp. $136.00 (hardcover), $23.96 (paperback).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 December 2019

Keisha Lindsay*
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review Symposium
Copyright
Copyright © The Women and Politics Research Section of the American Political Science Association 2019

Thirty-five years after the publication of bell hooks's Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center, feminists continue to debate one of the book's core themesnamely, that foregrounding black women's voices in intersectional theorizing is a politically promising and perilous act. hooks's specific argument is that black women's location within the “prevailing classist, sexist, racist social structure” affords them a “unique” and “central role … in the making of feminist theory” ([Reference hooks1984] Reference hooks2015, 16). hooks is equally adamant that women, including black women, mistakenly believe that “describing” or highlighting their particular “experience of oppression” is necessarily “synonymous with developing a critical political consciousness” (26).

Many contemporary feminists similarly argue that although “reliance on black women's experiences” is often part of a well-intentioned effort “to underscore problems of exclusion within feminist and anti-racist theory,” this phenomenon is problematic because it erroneously depicts black women as a “unitary and monolithic entity” unmarked by sexual, class, and other differences (Nash Reference Nash2008, 8; see also Hancock Reference Hancock2007). A related argument is that intersectionality is an emancipatory analytical framework precisely because it seeks to deconstruct, rather than embrace, the flawed, “calcified” notion that “black woman” and other social groups are static entities (Dhamoon Reference Dhamoon2011, 239; see also McCall Reference McCall2005).

Other contemporary feminists conclude, in sharp contrast, that it is important to privilege black women's voices when contemplating the co-constitutive dimensions of race, gender, and other inequalities of power. Doing so, these feminists assert, provides black women with a “tool for analyzing and responding to the material realities” of their oppression (Jordan-Zachery Reference Jordan-Zachery, Jordan-Zachery and Alexander-Floyd2014, 34–35; May Reference May2015). Still other feminists contend that centering black women as intersectionality's principal research subjects undermines racist white women's ability to determine that “racialized women's structural experience cannot generate theory” (Bilge Reference Bilge2013, 412; see also Crenshaw Reference Crenshaw, Lutz, Herrera Vivar and Supik2016).

Why does recent intersectional scholarship so clearly echo hooks's own contention, in Feminist Theory, that the wisdom of foregrounding black women's voices in intersectional theorizing is very much subject to debate? The answer is that hooks's work is significant not only because it still animates feminist research but also because it offers an important, pioneering explanation of why contemporary feminists disagree about black women's place in intersectional theorizing. This explanation, plainly put, is that the dialectic between “experience” and “politics” informs how marginalized social groups, including women, understand their oppression.

hooks's argument is twofold. She demonstrates, on the one hand, that experiencing oppression often motivates marginalized groups’ liberatory politics. In her own words, “revolutionary ideology can be created only if the experiences of people on the margin who suffer sexist oppression and other forms of group oppression are understood, addressed, and incorporated” (hooks [Reference hooks1984] Reference hooks2015, 163). Put otherwise, “identifying and describing” oppression is often “synonymous” with marginalized social groups’ ability and willingness to forge a “critical political consciousness” (26). Black women, hooks emphasizes, are no exception. Their “lived experience” imbues them with a “world view” that “directly challenges the prevailing classist, sexist, racist social structure and its concomitant ideology” (15).

On the other hand, hooks also reveals that harmful a priori politics often shape social groups’, including women's, understanding of why they experience oppression. A prime example, hooks explains, is that “race and class biases” ([Reference hooks1984] Reference hooks2015, 4) distort white middle-class feminists’ sense of what it means to experience gender-based oppression. The outcome is a feminist movement that is not “true to the lived experiences of women as a collective group” (3) but is instead “shaped by politics” (26) that casts working outside of the home and/or eschewing motherhood as the true markers of liberation.

Equally concerning for hooks is that “non-white women” are not immune from the harmful political assumptions that often undergird social groups’ understandings of why they are oppressed. By this, hooks means that many black women “feel that their definitions of the party line, whether on the issue of black feminism or on other issues, is the only legitimate discourse.” As a result, they do not “encourage a diversity of voices, critical dialogue, and controversy” but “stifle dissent” by presuming that they alone are “best able to judge whether other women's voices should be heard” (hooks [Reference hooks1984] Reference hooks2015, 10).

hooks's assertion—that being oppressed leads black women to embrace antiracist, feminist, and otherwise progressive politics and that their understanding of why they are oppressed is often informed by exclusionary, oppressive politics—reveals much about the ongoing debate about black women's status in intersectional theorizing. First, hooks's argument lends credence to the perspective of those participants in the debate who contend that to engage in intersectional theorizing is, by definition, to foreground black women's voices. I say this because, according to hooks's reasoning, experiencing oppression leads black women to not only become political but to also do so in ways that are explicitly intersectional.

Consider her declaration that black women should “make use” of the “special vantage point our marginality gives us” not just because doing so demonstrates that “our world view differs from those who have a degree of privilege” but also because such a move makes it possible to “criticize … dominant racist, classist, [and] sexist hegemony” ([1984] 2015, 16). In other words, if black women's experience of intersectional oppression provides them with “special” political insight about how best to resist subordination at the crossroads of race, gender, and class, then it stands to reason, hooks asserts, that their voices can and should take center stage in intersectional theory.

At the same time, hooks's parallel contention—that the meaning of oppression is always already a political construct—sheds light on why some feminists might be inclined to resist privileging black women's voices in intersectional research. To begin with, if it is the case that experiencing oppression, including intersectional oppression, is a politically defined phenomenon, then it is quite reasonable to conclude that intersectional research can be (re)constructed to include or not include black women. In addition, hooks's concomitant claim—that ideological and other differences shape non-white women's diverse understandings of why they experience oppression—suggests that it is in fact impossible to speak of “black women” as a homogenous group within the context of intersectional scholarship.

As the preceding paragraphs make clear, Feminist Theory is hardly alone in exploring black women's role in intersectional theorizing. Moreover, hooks is not the first feminist theorist to posit a dialectic between being oppressed and embracing a specific politics. Nancy Hartsock argues that articulating their experience of oppression leads some women to a feminist “standpoint” and that this standpoint is often “conditioned” by women's racist and otherwise oppressive social locations (Reference Hartsock1990, 32). E. Frances White speaks of “discursive dialectics” or the reality that black people's appeals to experience frequently challenge and “operate on the same ground” as “dominant ideolog[ies]” (Reference White1990, 79).

What Feminist Theory does do is put these two lines of inquiry—black women's place in intersectional theorizing and the dialectic between experience and politics—into dialogue with each other. An important lesson ultimately emerges from this dialogue: feminist debate, including debate about the merits of highlighting black women's voices in intersectional theorizing, is most productive when it avoids the “learned tendency to compare and judge” (hooks [Reference hooks1984] Reference hooks2015, 59). hooks does not mean that intersectional theorists should embrace the flawed notion that all women have the same experience of oppression. She argues, instead, that feminist theorists can and should recognize that there is more than one optimal way forward when it comes to deciphering how, if at all, to prioritize black women's voices in intersectional scholarship (59). To do otherwise, hooks rightly cautions, is to perpetuate the patriarchal mantra that women's “relationships with one another diminish rather than enrich our experience” or, more bluntly, that “we cannot, should not, and do not bond with one another” (43). For this invaluable insight regarding how to debate the politics of experience, today's intersectional theorists owe hooks an additional debt of gratitude.

References

REFERENCES

Bilge, Selma. 2013. “Intersectionality Undone.” Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race 10 (2): 405–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crenshaw, Kimberlé. 2016. “Postscript.” In Framing Intersectionality: Debates on a Multi-Faceted Concept in Gender Studies, eds. Lutz, Helma, Herrera Vivar, Maria Teresa, and Supik, Linda. Abingdon: Ashgate, 221–34.Google Scholar
Dhamoon, Rita. 2011. “Considerations on Mainstreaming Intersectionality.” Political Research Quarterly 64 (1): 230–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hancock, Ange-Marie. 2007. “Intersectionality as a Normative and Empirical Paradigm.” Politics & Gender 3 (2): 248–54.Google Scholar
Hartsock, Nancy. 1990. “Postmodernism and Political Change: Issues for Feminist Theory.” Cultural Critique 14 (Winter): 1133.Google Scholar
hooks, bell. [1984] 2015. Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Jordan-Zachery, Julia. 2014. “‘I Ain't Your Darn Help’: Black Women as the Help” in Intersectionality Research in Political Science.” In Black Women in Politics: Demanding Citizenship, Challenging Power, and Seeking Justice, eds. Jordan-Zachery, Julia and Alexander-Floyd, Nikol. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2743.Google Scholar
May, Vivian. 2015. Pursuing Intersectionality, Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
McCall, Leslie. 2005. “The Complexity of Intersectionality.” Signs 30 (3): 1771–800.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nash, Jennifer. 2008. “Rethinking Intersectionality.” Feminist Review 89: 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, E. Frances. 1990. “Africa on My Mind: Gender, Counter Discourse and African- American Nationalism.” Journal of Women's History 2 (1): 7197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar