Quote by: bell hooks

Watching Paris is Burning, I began to think that the many yuppie-looking, straight -acting, pushy, predominantly white folks in the audience were there because the film in no way interrogates “whiteness.” These folks left the film saying it was “amazing,” “marvellous,” incredibly funny,” worthy of statements like, “Didn’t you just love it?” And no, I didn’t love it. For in many ways the film was a graphic documentary portrait of the way in which colonized black people (in this case black gay brothers, some of whom were drag queens) worship at the throne of whiteness, even when such worship demands that we live in perpetual self-hate, steal, go hungry, and even die in its pursuit. The "we" evoked here is all of us, black people/people of color, who are daily bombarded by a powerful colonizing whiteness that seduces us away from ourselves, that negates that there is beauty to be found in any form of blackness that is not imitation whiteness.


Share this:  

Author Bio


  • Namebell hooks
  • DescriptionAmerican author, feminist, and social activist
  • AliasesGloria Jean Watkins
  • BornSeptember 25, 1952
  • CountryUnited States Of America
  • ProfessionPhilosopher
  • WorksAin't I A Woman?; All About Love: New Visions; We Real Cool: Black Men And Masculinity; Feminist Theory: From Margin To Center