This review has been accessed times since December 5, 2005
hooks, bell. (2003). Teaching Community: A Pedagogy of
Hope. New York: Routledge
Pp. xvi + 200
$17.95 ISBN 0-415-96818-6
Reviewed by Jennifer Adair
Arizona State University
December 5, 2005
Also see the review
by Brooke Johnson
bell hooks’s latest contribution to education and
pedagogy, Teaching Community offers a group of essays
aimed at explaining how to achieve a pedagogy that creates a
genuine community of people who feel free and hopeful about the
future. She insists that such a community must be centered on
anti-racist, critical- thinking oriented pedagogy that asserts
the world can change for the better, as it has in the past.
Reading Teaching Community is an intellectual exercise
that can yield beneficial self-critique as well as pedagogical
corrections. While some of the chapters seem like journal entries
that distract from the larger picture, others should be
internalized, even embodied, by teachers and teacher educators as
well as by all those who seek social justice elsewhere.
Author hooks presents her essays as “practical
wisdom,” and the essays taken together appear to center on
three principles. First, that racism is a conscious choice, not
something embedded in culture or biology. Because racism is a
choice, it can be unlearned, overturned, repented of, and
dismissed. Viewing racism as a choice, instead of an inevitable
societal phenomenon leaves room for people to change. The second
principle is that pedagogy has the power to promote critical
thinking among students, to help them see their own lives openly
and to assure them that they can make responsible and
compassionate choices. The third principle maintains that
teachers teach the way they live outside the classroom and that
their commitment to social justice and racial equity can be
measured by those with whom they spend the most time.
In “Race and Racism,” hooks argues that fighting
racism means enlarging one’s social sphere. She explains:
“Rather than simply accept that class power often situates
me in a world where I have little or no contact with other black
people, especially individuals from underprivileged classes, I as
a black person with class privilege can actively seek out these
relationships. More often than not to do this work, I must make
an effort to expand my social world.”(p. 36). She then
observes that many of her white peers, when trying to unlearn
white supremacy, realize that they have little or no meaningful
contact with non-white people. So, she insists, teachers and
teacher educators need to “open their eyes” and see
the non-white people around them and bring them into their
personal world in a respectful and meaningful way. This is a
concrete way to challenge the dominant hierarchy that insists on
class and racial boundaries between people and ideas. In the
chapter, “Race and Racism,” hooks also comments on
the holistic nature of teaching; a teacher’s life is made
up mostly of decisions made outside the classroom and that racism
cannot be hidden in the classroom if one practices it by omission
outside their teaching context. She recounts a class exercise
that creates a genealogical map of students’ first
recollection of race. Such an exercise could be quite
thought-provoking in a number of different circumstances.
In the subsequent and equally important essay, “What
Happens When White People Change,” hooks insists that all
people (not just whites) have to resist the domination of white
privilege in their lives. People who make genuine efforts are
courageous and need recognition so they can serve as examples to
others. Focusing on those who are racist while ignoring those who
sacrifice and work hard for social justice only reinforces the
inevitability of racism and inequality. When society acts as
though white people cannot change, white supremacy continues.
Seeing racism and the lack of social mobility as a matter of
coincidence, instead of as sexist and racist policies that white
(and black) people can work to correct, frustrates the work of
equality and obstructs freedom and hope.
Maybe hooks’s argument is too simple but the idea is
worth pursuing. As hooks explains, when white people do nothing,
the idea is perpetuated that racism is coincidence, “merely
existing” instead of being the result of something that is
consciously created and therefore can be consciously destroyed.
Another key point is that white people can and do change their
ways but they also make mistakes. In her chapter,
“Standards,” hooks uses the example of a group of
female black colleagues who judge a close white friend based on
one mistake, while discounting all she has done and sacrificed
for racial and gender equality. Hooks believes those black women
gave into the idea that all white people are racist. Such a
mentality only reinforces the normalization and inescapability of
racism in America. White people should use these types of
misunderstandings and other suffering, not as a ruler by which to
judge others but as a bridge to understand other types of
suffering, those that come because of a racist society, or even
more specifically, a racist education system.
In several chapters, hooks discusses the obstacles academia
poses to a pedagogy of community centered on hope and freedom.
She challenges higher education to be less hypocritical in their
“official” efforts to be engaged in gender and racial
and economic equity. Those who claim to work for gender and
racial equality in admissions and in hiring but happen to work
among a largely white faculty are merely assisting the white
privileged patriarchy to continue. It is hypocritical, she
maintains, to teach that racism is a problem while actively
benefiting (without resistance) from policies and practices that
make it so.
In, “How Can We Serve,” hooks asks educators to
look at students as a call to service; to find ways to listen and
assist students who are underrepresented and who resist the
expectations the hierarchy assigns to them. It is important to
listen carefully to multiple perspectives and to use the voice or
silence of students’ of color as a way to critique
one’s own pedagogy. If the classroom is not a safe space
for some students to speak, then it is not a community. Instead
it remains a space that tells students of color that they are
exceptions or visitors instead of equal participants.
“Keepers of Hope” is a dialogue with her white
colleague and good friend, Ron Scrapp. The conversation centers
on the values progressive educators bring to the classroom and
the need to maintain and promote hope even while voicing
opposition to dominant ideals that reproduce oppression. The
chapter, “Heart to Heart,” encourages teachers to
connect with all of their students in an emotional, loving way.
Other, less poignant chapters, focus on spirituality as well as
the sexual conduct and orientation of teachers, namely in
academia. These chapters seem disconnected from the themes
central in the other chapters.
While much can be made of her somewhat dramatic and
unapologetic tone when discussing the patriarchal nature of
higher education, I think the most important piece missing is
hooks’s own sense of “theoretical genealogy.”
For example, in her chapter “Standards,” hooks argues
that black students have been socialized to believe that
education “will lead them away from blackness.”
However, it seems like this would be an important place to cite
the work of scholars invested in such research, most notably
Signithia Fordham (1986; 1996), an educational anthropologist
whose work has led to a better understanding of the potential for
black female resistance to white domination in high schools.
Asking for a “theory trail,” or a bibliography at the
very least, seems appropriate considering some may read
Teaching Community, feel empowered to make pedagogical
changes, and need additional readings.
Arguably, hooks intended to stay far from academic verbiage
and instead, chose to engage in public conversation. Her
prominence as a public intellectual certainly justifies such a
decision. Or perhaps she wanted to avoid being bound by a
specific theoretical framework (e.g., feminism,
structural-functionalism, Marxism, critical race theory). And we
know that chapters and books with long citations and theoretical
mapping can discourage students and practitioners from reading
them, which in this case would be regrettable. Indeed, it may be
hooks’s sophisticated yet uncluttered explanations that
have led to her public success.
It is obvious that hooks internalizes the world around her in
a deeply observant way and that her experiences are critical to
the ideas developed in Teaching Community and other works.
But we are not privy to her intellectual encounters with current
educational discourses and specific areas of research. As a
compromise, perhaps chapter endnotes or appendices (in addition
to some type of bibliography) could be offered as a way to
understand what outside sources are mixing with the world she
experiences.
My second and final critique is also a tribute to the impact
of the book. Often the language seems dramatic and
“over-the-top.” Phrases like, “Imperialist,
white-supremacist, capitalist patriarchy” can feel so harsh
and aggressive that readers, especially university and college
students, may turn off from hooks’s larger points. However,
there is a powerful teaching moment in such statements. The power
of her writing for the education of pre-service teachers is the
unavoidable discussion which begins “Why does this make you
uncomfortable?” Talking openly about phrases and ideas
asserted by hooks in Teaching Community can lead to rich
and meaningful dialogue if the three main principles discussed
earlier are in place; the acknowledgement that racism is a choice
and can be changed, that pedagogy is pursuing critical thinking,
and that teachers in the classrooms are reflections of themselves
outside the classroom context. In other words, such important
discussions are only possible in a community-based, anti-racist,
critically-thinking classroom.
References
Fordham, S. and Ogbu, J.U. (1986). Black students' school
success: Coping with the "burden of 'Acting White.'” The
Urban Review, 18, 176-206.
Fordham, S. (1996). Blacked Out: Dilemmas of Race,
Identity, and Success at Capital High. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press.
About the Reviewer
Jennifer Adair is a Ph.D. student at Arizona State
University, in the area of Education and Anthropology. Her
interests include immigration and young children; the effects of
educational policy on family relationships, and the intersection
of culture, race, and class in teacher education.
Copyright is retained by the first or sole author,
who grants right of first publication to the Education Review.
Editors: Gene V Glass, Kate Corby, Gustavo Fischman
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