Between Grandma and Granddaughter – The Process of Becoming a Black Woman in a Racist Society. Analysis of Intergenerational Transmission on the Example of bell hooks’ autobiography Bone Black: Memories of Girlhood

Auteurs

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.18778/2450-4491.14.03

Mots-clés :

intergenerational transmission, family history, life story, Black woman, bell hooks

Résumé

The aim of the essay is to discuss an intergenerational transmission of family history and its impact on the process of becoming a Black woman in a racist society. The example chosen for analysis is the autobiography of bell hooks, Bone Black: Memories of Girlhood (1996), which is a story about girlhood. (B)ell hooks is a pen name of Gloria Jean Watkins, an African-American scholar and writer whose childhood and adolescence were during the period of racial segregation and desegregation in the 1960s of the twentieth century. (B)ell hooks writes Bone Black to reflect on being a Black girl growing up in racially segregated American society in the 60s of the twentieth century. She shows the historical and political contexts of her growing up, however, it is the local community and intergenerational family ties that she places at the center of her process of becoming the woman: bell hooks. Relationships with women, particularly a relationship between grandmother and granddaughter are of great significance in this process. The essay begins with a brief summary of the biography of bell hooks and a description of Bone Black, with particular emphasis put on the author’s interand intragenerational relationships with women. Next, I will move on to discuss the intergenerational transmissions of family history and their impact on the process of becoming a woman. For this purpose, I will refer to the life story concept introduced by Daniel Bertaux (2016), and the notion of subjective resources created by Catherine Delcroix (1999, 2014), in order to discuss the importance of intergenerational transmission of life stories in the process of becoming the woman knowns as “bell hooks.”

Biographie de l'auteur

Aneta Ostaszewska, University of Warsaw

Aneta Ostaszewska – Professor at the University of Warsaw. Director of the Centre for Women’s and Gender Research. Research interests: the problem of auto/biography in social sciences and humanities, subjectivity of women, politics of (in)equality. She is the author of the book Proces kształtowania kobiecej podmiotowości. Pedagogiczne stadium samorozwoju bell hooks (Warszawa: WNPWN, 2018) which received a special mention in the contest organized by the Lodz Scientific Society (in honor of Professor Irena Lepalczyk) for research in the field of social pedagogy.

Références

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Publiée

2022-07-07

Comment citer

Ostaszewska, A. (2022). Between Grandma and Granddaughter – The Process of Becoming a Black Woman in a Racist Society. Analysis of Intergenerational Transmission on the Example of bell hooks’ autobiography Bone Black: Memories of Girlhood. Nauki O Wychowaniu. Studia Interdyscyplinarne, 14(1), 29–42. https://doi.org/10.18778/2450-4491.14.03