Work was and is produced in the academy that is oftentimes visionary,鈥 wrote bell hooks in her influential book Feminism Is for Everybody: Passionate Politics (2000), adding 鈥 crucially 鈥 that 鈥渢hese insights rarely reach many people鈥. She鈥檚 right: the opacity and elitism that characterise much 鈥渁cademic鈥 feminist writing threaten to undermine the political effectiveness of an already besieged movement. It seems only right, then, that hooks has championed Sara Ahmed鈥檚 Living a Feminist Life, writing that it is 鈥渁 brilliant, witty, visionary new way to think about feminist theory鈥, and that 鈥渆veryone should read this book鈥. At the core of Ahmed鈥檚 book is her own desire to 鈥渞each many people鈥; to 鈥渂ring feminist theory home by generating feminist theory out of ordinary experiences of being a feminist鈥.
Ahmed鈥檚 resignation in the summer of 2016 from her post as director of the Centre for Feminist Research at Goldsmiths, University of London had an impact beyond the academy. She articulated her position on her blog,, in a remarkable post called 鈥淩esignation is a Feminist Issue鈥. 鈥淲e are not having the conversations鈥 about sexual harassment on university campuses, wrote Ahmed, 鈥渂ecause they would get in the way of our happiness. If our happiness depends on turning away from violence, our happiness is violence.鈥
The admixture of sex, power, young people and feminism that characterised the story of Ahmed鈥檚 principled stance proved irresistible to the British press. 鈥淪ex cover-up row: Feminism professor quits university post over claims drunk staff groped students鈥, bellowed The Sun, and the Daily Mail, never a publication to bypass an opportunity to foment moral panic (or, it appears, to eliminate syntactical ambiguity), reported on how 鈥渟tudents had become pregnant by academics, and staff had groped and 鈥榝orced themselves鈥 on students while drunk鈥.
This is the cultural climate in which feminist academics must work. To preach not only to the choir, but to a far wider congregation, too, is to engage repeatedly in socially and institutionally uncomfortable acts that have sometimes life-changing consequences. Ahmed has shown us this. In a deliberate echo of her blog鈥檚 name, she dedicates Living a Feminist Life to 鈥渢he many feminist killjoys out there doing your thing鈥, and the book鈥檚 two conclusions, 鈥淎 Killjoy Survival Kit鈥 and 鈥淎 Killjoy Manifesto鈥, show 鈥渉ow we create principles from an experience of what we come up against, from how we live a feminist life鈥.
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To live a feminist life entails embracing the roles of agitator, misfit, pest and killjoy. It involves never giving up on exposing the flimsiness and vulnerability of power, 鈥渘ormality鈥 or 鈥渢radition鈥. And it means, as Ahmed so brilliantly demonstrates, recognising how 鈥渇eminism鈥 is 鈥渨hat we need to handle the consequences of being feminist鈥. She explicitly acknowledges the feminists on whose shoulders she stands, making reference to hooks, Audre Lorde, Adrienne Rich, Shulamith Firestone, Judith Butler and other writers who have made an impact on her.
Living a Feminist Life is perhaps the most accessible and important of Ahmed鈥檚 works to date. Its debt to her earlier books such as Queer Phenomenology: Orientations, Objects, Others (2006) and, more explicitly, to 2014鈥檚 brilliant Willful Subjects is clear, and 鈥渁ccessibility鈥 can really work only if, as is the case with Ahmed, it鈥檚 securely underpinned with years of engaging with feminist theory and living a feminist life. 鈥淚n this book, I do use academic language,鈥 she writes. 鈥淏ut I also aim to keep my words as close to the world as I can.鈥
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Ahmed鈥檚 writing style has always been quirky, and this quirkiness is ramped up in Living a Feminist Life. Those years of academic apprenticeship have equipped her to write in a variety of styles, from the confessional to the anecdotal to the deadly serious (her discussion here of the murder in 2012 of Trayvon Martin is superb), and also to the very funny (鈥淚n my killjoy survival kit I would have a bag of fresh chilies; I tend to add chilies to most things. I am not saying chilies are little feminists.鈥).
Like an accomplished musician, Ahmed can riff on the same theme in a number of ways, returning to, and reinventing, refrains, making them at once new and familiar. A black-and-white illustration of a brick wall, for example, appears more than once in the book. In one chapter it鈥檚 labelled 鈥淎 job description鈥; in another it鈥檚 a 鈥淟ife description鈥. And the 鈥渂ricks鈥 themselves are important. 鈥淐itations鈥, she writes, are 鈥渁cademic bricks鈥. When there is a lack of diversity on a reading list or a conference panel or a senior management team, it becomes incumbent upon the feminist 鈥渢o create a crisis around citation, even just a hesitation, a wondering, that might help us not to follow the well-trodden citational paths鈥.
鈥淭his is the first time I have written a book alongside a blog,鈥 Ahmed writes early on. And the narrative style of Living a Feminist Life is variable, perhaps because of this parallel. It is, at times, a quite dazzlingly lively, angry and urgent call to arms. But in some sections the material is more laboured. The 鈥渃ompanion texts鈥 that Ahmed uses, 鈥渇eminist classics鈥 including Virginia Woolf鈥檚 Mrs Dalloway and Toni Morrison鈥檚 The Bluest Eye, and films such as Marleen Gorris鈥 A Question of Silence, are intended to 鈥渟park a moment of revelation in the midst of an overwhelming proximity鈥. Instead, they interrupt the flow of the book鈥檚 otherwise engaging project of the feminist making her 鈥渙wn experience into a resource, my experiences as a brown woman, lesbian, daughter鈥. In other words, the book鈥檚 core project of showing how the personal is political 鈥 of how an individual鈥檚 crises and traumas can be reconfigured as springboards into resistance and renewal 鈥 loses momentum.
But when that momentum is given free rein, Ahmed鈥檚 writing is glorious: poetic and inspiring. Feminism becomes 鈥渢hat which infects a body with a desire to speak in ways other than how you have been commanded to speak鈥; 鈥渄iversity work鈥 is described as taking 鈥渢he form of repeated encounters with what does not and will not move鈥; and to critique racism in the academy is to 鈥渂ecome a threat to the easing of a progression when you point out how a progression is eased鈥.
This is still a book with its gaze very firmly fixed on the academy. It doesn鈥檛 鈥渂ring feminist theory home鈥 in quite the way Ahmed hopes. It will not have the broad appeal of hooks鈥 own Feminism Is for Everybody, or of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie鈥檚 We Should All Be Feminists (2014).
To return to the Daily Mail, as someone desperate for a cup of tea might return to a carton of milk she strongly suspects has gone off, and to read the online comments on its coverage of Ahmed鈥檚 resignation is, unsurprisingly, unedifying. 鈥淒irector of Feminist Research?鈥 writes Mark from Whitehaven: 鈥淚s this where we are in Higher Education these days? What exactly is the point?鈥 And the comment from 鈥淩umPULL鈥 of York, which reads 鈥淔eminism Professor? HAHAHAAHAHHAA鈥 has had 255 鈥渓ikes鈥 to date. Such vitriol and vaunted ignorance serve as reminders of how utterly pervasive misogyny is. They also make hooks鈥 plea for everyone to read this book more important than ever. In short, everybody should read Ahmed鈥檚 book precisely because not everybody will.
Emma Rees is professor of literature and gender studies at the University of Chester, where she is director of the Institute of Gender Studies.
Living a Feminist Life
By Sara Ahmed
Duke University Press, 312pp, 拢82.00 and 拢22.99
ISBN 9780822363040 and 3194
Published 3 February 2017
The author

Sara Ahmed, until recently professor of race and cultural studies at Goldsmiths, University of London, says that opting to leave her post in 2016 鈥渨as also a decision to leave the university system. The future is unpredictable, but at this point I am not expecting to take up another position. I will be continuing my work as a full-time writer and independent scholar.鈥
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She was born in Salford and emigrated with her family to Australia when she was five. 鈥淢y experiences of moving and also of being mixed heritage have shaped me in so many ways: not being from where you live (and being seen as a stranger because of how you look) means you see things quite differently. Much of my political consciousness, and wilful ways, come from my early experiences of whiteness as a brown child. Whiteness is a wall.鈥
As a child, she was 鈥渁n avid reader鈥 but I am not so sure about studious. Although in this book I call feminist killjoys 鈥榮tudious鈥, so maybe I was! I do remember one of my English literature teachers telling me to read the Communist Manifesto. I think I had a couple of teachers who inspired me to study because they linked studying things with changing things. Many of my teachers were books.鈥澛
Ahmed took an undergraduate degree in arts at the University of Adelaide. 鈥淚 was a very serious student, and very hard-working. I came to the UK for my PhD in 1991 at the Centre for Critical and Cultural Theory at Cardiff University. I found the environment of 鈥榗ritical theory鈥, as it was then and there, rather stifling. I had a very different idea of what I wanted theory to do and ideas can lead to collisions. I describe these experiences a little in the book. But I made some amazing friends at Cardiff.鈥 But by then, she adds, 鈥淚 was rather a less serious student. I learned a lot from both ways of being a student!鈥
Her blog began in 2013. 鈥淲riting a blog and being on Twitter as well has changed my writing considerably. I am much more conscious now about who I am writing for, and I feel less constrained by academic conventions, although I do use them for the projects they work for (I have just finished a draft of another book on 鈥榯he uses of use鈥 which is written in a more conventional way, although it develops my rather queer method of following words around). So many people have sent me their own feminist killjoy stories since I began my blog. I am inspired by them; this book came out of that inspiration.鈥
She adds that 鈥渢he figure of the feminist killjoy speaks to how feminists are judged as causing unhappiness. You are often assumed to be complaining because you are unhappy. When you point out sexism or racism, you get in the way of happiness.聽We learn about happiness from those who get in the way!鈥
Returning to her departure from Goldsmiths, Ahmed says that 鈥渢he decision to leave was made quite quickly. I had what I call a 鈥榮nap moment鈥, when I realised I just couldn't take it any more.
鈥淏ut snap has a history.聽I was exhausted from the struggle to get the college to take the problem of sexual harassment more seriously. So really the lead-up to the decision was slow. Once I made the decision, it was such a relief. It is one of the best decisions I have made. I have much work to do, and I miss very much being part of the Centre for Feminist Research (which was a real feminist shelter for many and will remain so) but I need to do my feminist work somewhere else. And it was also energising to witness how making public the reasons for my resignation had an impact on others fighting similar battles in their respective institutions. We need to keep naming the problem even if it means becoming a problem.鈥
Asked to name some early career scholars whose work she has found valuable, Ahmed replies: 鈥淚 have been inspired by the students (some of whom are now early career academics) I worked with on sexual harassment, including Leila Whitley and Tiffany Page. I look forward to reading their feminist outputs. Our energy does generate its own outputs!
鈥淚 am also inspired by early career scholars who are willing to be troublemakers, who are using radical citational policies, and who are experimenting with writing. I think here especially of Alexis Pauline Gumbs: her recent book , also published by Duke, is fantastic.鈥
Who gives her hope?聽鈥淔eminist and anti-racist activisms. Killjoys. People who put their lives on the line to fight for a more just world.鈥
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Karen Shook
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Killjoys, it鈥檚 time to create a crisis
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