


To be changed by ideas was pure pleasure. The all-black school she went to as a young girl she writes of as being ‘a place of ecstasy – pleasure and danger’.

Her early schooling she describes as ‘sheer joy’. She came from a poor working class family and worked her way up the academic ladder to become Distinguished Professor of English at City College in New York. (hooks 2003 p.xiv)īell hooks (1952- ) (nee Gloria Watkins) was born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. As teachers we believe that learning is possible, that nothing can keep an open mind from seeking after knowledge and finding a way to know. Educating is always a vocation rooted in hopefulness. My hope emerges from those places of struggle where I witness individuals positively transforming their lives and the world around them. Barry Burke assesses the contribution that bell hooks has made to thinking about education and sets this within the context of her biography and work.
