Professor Anita Hill will sign and personalize her book Believing: Our Thirty-Year Journey to End Gender Violence to you!
Professor Anita Hill was the 1992 recipient of the ACLU SoCal Bill of Rights Award, and we are proud to include this item in our auction.
She was honored alongside Barbra Streisand. In her remarks, Streisand encapsulated why Professor Hill was being honored: “Even if I weren’t being honored tonight, I would be here to honor Anita Hill. For three startling days last year, this woman became everywoman–every woman who has ever been called arrogant for daring to stand her ground, every woman who has been maligned for asserting her innocence, every woman who has had her sexuality used as a weapon against her. We watched her and we saw ourselves sitting in that chair. And we felt violated. Though quiet, she was strong and her performance unnerved the tribunal she faced. She was at that moment, whether she intended it or not, the finest example of women’s collective courage. We knew it and the men who went after her knew it. Heat water, and at a certain moment it becomes steam. Well, that’s what happened with the Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas hearings. The water boiled, the steam erupted, and the lid blew off the political pot. In the aftermath, 155 women ran for high office; 48 got elected to the House and six to the Senate … For that and the fact that things will never be the same, we thank Anita Hill."
About the book:
“An elegant, impassioned demand that America see gender-based violence as a cultural and structural problem that hurts everyone, not just victims and survivors… It's at times downright virtuosic in the threads it weaves together.”—Winner of the 2022 ABA Silver Gavel Award for Books.
From the woman who gave the landmark testimony against Clarence Thomas as a sexual menace, a new manifesto about the origins and course of gender violence in our society; a combination of memoir, personal accounts, law, and social analysis, and a powerful call to arms from one of our most prominent and poised survivors. In 1991, Anita Hill began something that's still unfinished work. The issues of gender violence, touching on sex, race, age, and power, are as urgent today as they were when she first testified. Believing is a story of America's three decades long reckoning with gender violence, one that offers insights into its roots, and paths to creating dialogue and substantive change.
It is a call to action that offers guidance based on what this brave, committed fighter has learned from a lifetime of advocacy and her search for solutions to a problem that is still tearing America apart. We once thought gender-based violence—from casual harassment to rape and murder—was an individual problem that affected a few; we now know it's cultural and endemic, and happens to our acquaintances, colleagues, friends and family members, and it can be physical, emotional and verbal. Women of color experience sexual harassment at higher rates than White women. Street harassment is ubiquitous and can escalate to violence. Transgender and nonbinary people are particularly vulnerable.
Anita Hill draws on her years as a teacher, legal scholar, and advocate, and on the experiences of the thousands of individuals who have told her their stories, to trace the pipeline of behavior that follows individuals from place to place: from home to school to work and back home. In measured, clear, blunt terms, she demonstrates the impact it has on every aspect of our lives, including our physical and mental wellbeing, housing stability, political participation, economy and community safety, and how our descriptive language undermines progress toward solutions. And she is uncompromising in her demands that our laws and our leaders must address the issue concretely and immediately.
Please note that the ACLU of Southern California is a 501(c)4 organization and bids are not tax deductible.