01090nam a2200277 i 4500991001780829707536030918s1995 it 000 0 ita d8802049114b12196010-39ule_instBiblioteca Interfacoltàitaita852.5Della Valle, Federico316166Opere di Federico Della Valle /a cura di Maria Gabriella StassiTorino:UTETc1995634 p., [8] c. di tav. :ill. ;24 cmClassici italiani [UTET] ;65Nr. del vol. tratto dal cat. edit.Della Valle, FedericoOprereEdizioniStassi, Maria Gabriella.b1219601002-04-1418-09-03991001780829707536LE002 Coll. 1.7 (Italiano), 25 [v. 65] 12002000238450 le002Nr. del vol. tratto dal cat. edit. pE0.00-no 00000.i1256698618-09-03Opere di Federico Della Valle157606UNISALENTOle002 - - ma -itait 0003999nam 22007215 450 991091980960332120241227115247.09783031746970303174697X10.1007/978-3-031-74697-0(MiAaPQ)EBC31862478(Au-PeEL)EBL31862478(CKB)37093814300041(DE-He213)978-3-031-74697-0(OCoLC)1482815114(EXLCZ)993709381430004120241227d2024 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Black Marxist Feminism of bell hooks Towards an Intersectional Theory of White-Supremacist Capitalist Patriarchy /by Hue Woodson1st ed. 2024.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2024.1 online resource (399 pages)Marx, Engels, and Marxisms,2524-71319783031746963 3031746961 INTRODUCTION: Defining Black Marxist Feminism -- CHAPTER 1: The Proletariat Experiences of Black Womanhood -- CHAPTER 2: Imperialism(s) and the Toxicities of the Advanced Capitalist World -- CHAPTER 3: Theories of Value for Black Womanhood -- CHAPTER 4: Rethinking Racial Capitalism(s) as Sexual Capitalism/Capitalist Sexism -- CHAPTER 5: The Contractarianism of White Supremacist Capitalist Patriarchy -- CONCLUSION: The Ideologies, Hegemonies, Pedagogies, and Rhetorics of White Supremacist Capitalist Patriarchy: The Emergence of the Oppositional Gaze.This book explores bell hooks' trajectory of work and cohesiveness of thought about the meaning and meaningfulness of black womanhood in terms of a Black Marxist feminism, which uniquely confronts the dimensions of feminism and womanism; the relations between the secular and the religious; the problems of gender and sexism; and the structural and systemic issues of oppression, domination, white supremacy, and capitalism. In making sense of black womanhood in its philosophical, social, cultural, institutional, and historical complexities, hooks' Black Marxist feminism constructs an intersectional theory about what hooks describes as white supremacist capitalist patriarchy. In this sense, hooks' Black Marxist feminism conceptualizes the ways and means by which white supremacist capitalist patriarchy imposes intersectional predicaments upon black womanhood, drawing foundationally on Karl Marx and Fredrich Engels, working within the purview of a host of Marxisms in Antonio Gramsci, Louis Althusser, Karl Kautsky, Nikolai Bukharin, and Georgi Plekhanov, and speaking to the Marxist proclivities of Cedric Robinson, Cornel West, Charles W. Mills, James H. Cone, Stuart Hall, and Angela Y. Davis. Hue Woodson is Assistant Professor of English at Tarrant County College, USA.Marx, Engels, and Marxisms,2524-7131Political scienceMarxian school of sociologyRaceCritical theoryFeminismFeminist theoryPolitical TheoryMarxist SociologyRace and Ethnicity StudiesCritical TheoryFeminism and Feminist TheoryPolitical science.Marxian school of sociology.Race.Critical theory.Feminism.Feminist theory.Political Theory.Marxist Sociology.Race and Ethnicity Studies.Critical Theory.Feminism and Feminist Theory.305.48896073Woodson Hue1781482MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910919809603321The Black Marxist Feminism of Bell Hooks4306296UNINA