All About Love

New Visions

240 pages

French language

Published Nov. 6, 2022 by Éditions Divergences.

ISBN:
979-10-97088-51-4
Copied ISBN!
Goodreads:
62103421

View on Inventaire

4 stars (32 reviews)

All About Love: New Visions is a book by bell hooks published in 2000 that discusses aspects of love in modern society. Hooks combines personal anecdotes as well as psychological and philosophical ideas to develop and strengthen her argument. She focuses on romantic love and believes that in American culture men have been socialized to mistrust the value and power of love while women have been socialized to be loving in most situations – even when their need to receive love goes unmet.

10 editions

All about love

4 stars

Bell hooks proses and musings on love. Not sure why, but I expected it to be a feminist text engaging with the idea of love. It is more a love text engaging with feminism. I recently lost my mom and "recently" ended a handful of important relationships and want to engage with this concept of love from someone I respect. I want to both play with an openness to love and optimism being apart of politics and I want to feel open to love when feeling like vulnerability can be so hard.

I liked her engagement with childhood and learning love that we reproduce when we are older, at least when we don't interrogate it and seek to change that relationship. And her critiques of patriarchy and the ways that socialized men and socialized women commonly relate to love, care, and empathy.

The section on grief and love was my …

All about love but hard to like

2 stars

This is a book about love, which begins by promising a different perspective than the common romantic-love angle in similar books. I hoped I would love it, but perhaps it was just the wrong introduction for me to bell hooks' writing. There are moments of brilliance, such as the excellent sixth chapter: Values, which discusses richly and poetically in how social systems influence thoughts on love.

However, most of the writing failed to land. It felt like an attempt to marry academic writing with memoir, with too little rigour for the former and too little reflection for the latter. Narrow personal reflections are given as evidence for problems with love painted with broad brushstrokes, and throughout the book the perspective is very US-centric, never considering love from any non-US or non-western perspective. Repetition also mars most chapters. In the end, the book is a bit too loose and while hooks' …

excellent positive tone and cultural critique

4 stars

Love is a willful act, to honestly commit and extend yourself to make others' conditions of growth your own. The ways our society portrays love as compatible with domination, selfishness, accumulation, and instant gratification make it harder to recognize and enact meaningful love, but we all have access to loving counter-narratives in community, friendships, religion, self-acceptance, etc.

My first hooks, a deeply well-read commentator pulling in a wide range of threads from 20c writing and her personal experiences.

Review of 'All about love' on 'GoodReads'

3 stars

This was a bit of a miss for me, which is disappointing to myself because I really want to get behind everything bell hooks writes. But I found there was actually a huge amount of really harsh this or that black & white aspirational blanket statements and not very much room for nuance or even concrete guidance on how to get to this "true love". One of the first and biggest ideas the book opens with is that abuse and love can not coexist and at first I thought I was just being resistant to having unexamined assumptions shaked but now at the end of the book I do think I can say actually, no, I disagree, I still do think love and abuse can coexist. it's not GOOD, it's quite bad, but hurt people hurt people and you can hurt people you love deeply, the two things can both …

Review of 'All About Love' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Mixed feelings. Hooks offers fresh language and a perspective different from the usual Buddhist-y fare. Insights that made me pause and reflect. OTOH her spiritual background is christianity, and she harps way too much on it. She also comes off as preachy, holier-than-thou, and I don’t want to make a connection there but it sure is hard not to. I got more a sense of grudging tolerance for others than compassion. She also dismissively propagates misinformation about complex historical incidents that deserve more care than she gives them.

Three stars, adding one because the good parts were really, really thought-provoking.

avatar for meganmoss

rated it

5 stars
avatar for AnneLouiseMerrill

rated it

4 stars
avatar for tealtorch

rated it

4 stars
avatar for AudientVoid

rated it

4 stars
avatar for spacegauch0

rated it

3 stars
avatar for kneelz

rated it

4 stars
avatar for linse

rated it

5 stars
avatar for MahdiZareie

rated it

4 stars
avatar for actuallym

rated it

3 stars
avatar for ike

rated it

4 stars
avatar for ellenwilde

rated it

5 stars
avatar for cent

rated it

4 stars
avatar for maco

rated it

5 stars
avatar for cjhubbs

rated it

5 stars
avatar for Axl

rated it

4 stars
avatar for Kody_Sider

rated it

5 stars
avatar for Kody_Sider

rated it

4 stars
avatar for wordeater

rated it

3 stars
avatar for jnyrose

rated it

5 stars
avatar for anaulin

rated it

5 stars
avatar for kalanggam

rated it

5 stars
avatar for coppelia

rated it

5 stars