Hdjskismdo I just found this, but omg it got me so excited hearing someone talk about my icon Gloria Anzaldúa. Appreciate your time and energy to make this!
Reading into Glorias work, while I am not queer, has helped me to find something to culturally identify as a mixed Mexican American who does not speak Spanish. I am glad that I found something that I can identify with as Mestizo.
Thanks so much for this! I'm going to use this in the Race & Ethnicity class I teach and I'm so excited for my students to explore these concepts and histories! Thank you!
She was an inspiration to so many people when I was younger. As humans, we identified with her struggle and fight to be and explore all things that shape the self. As fellow Texans , her poetry and words of rebellious love were respected, didnt matter ethnicity or orientation, her search for meaning resonated , and continues to resonate, thanks for sharing. People today could use a reminder
Just watched your video for my race and ethnics studies course, it made me feel very comfortable knowing that even though I don’t speak Spanish being a Mexican-American I can recognize myself through the mestiza consciousness
Neplantera, en el 50th anniversary of Xican@ Moratorium, I've arrived in Nepantla. Denis gracias. Do you have a lesson plan for middle school students? I will create one. Great interpretation!
I apologize for the late reply, I haven’t been getting notifications for comments. I do not, I’m not actually a teacher, but I love that Latinx History is being taught to middle school students!
It's very sad to not have Anzaldua around today when Latine folks in the US are trying to understand their place in the US while also having a reckoning with the whiteness that exists within our community. Many of us white/white-passing Latine, unfortunately, have co-opted this idea of mestiza to run away from the reality of our privilege, while at the same time showing little respect or acknowledgment to indigenous and black folks in our places of origin outside of these conversations to distance themselves from their fact of whiteness. While this mestiza consciousness is vital for the survival of truly intersectional folks, this "tolerance for ambiguity" can be dangerous when adopted by people for which ambiguity means nothingness instead of embracing everything as Anzaldua wished.
It's so strange for me hearing this because I'm yet another layer removed, into whiteness. I'm "a quarter Mexican" and within that, mestizx / chicanx. But my black hair and 'stache don't let me forget it, and I feel that despite the generations of "cleansing la raza", something of... all of this exists within me. But I'm hesitant to identify myself with it at all. My grandmother effectively "stopped being Mexican" when she got married, but you can't just undo who you are.
This pretty much sums my experience up, also quarter Mexican and lived in a predominantly white area. I couldn’t help but feel as though my “fellow”anglos always viewed me with a skeptic eye and knew I was somehow different than they were even if they weren’t sure of what my mixed heritage was.
Wow, Denis although I am not gay I can totally relate to not feeling like I belong to my own race because I am too gringa and also too Mexican to be American.
Hey there folks, my video was quoted in this short experimental film by CJ. Please check it out! ua-cam.com/video/3aQu_9GxxE4/v-deo.html
Nice job, Denis. Very useful and clearly explained. Thank you!
Hdjskismdo I just found this, but omg it got me so excited hearing someone talk about my icon Gloria Anzaldúa. Appreciate your time and energy to make this!
Thank you!
Jus finished "Borderlands/La Frontera" and wanted to hear someone else talk abt it, really appreciate what you had to say!!! Thanks for sharing 🌹
Rocky Arenas thank you!
Reading into Glorias work, while I am not queer, has helped me to find something to culturally identify as a mixed Mexican American who does not speak Spanish. I am glad that I found something that I can identify with as Mestizo.
Reading this for my class. This helped a lot and was better cause of who you are💕 Don’t stop being you, you seem so fun and sweet.
Thanks so much for this! I'm going to use this in the Race & Ethnicity class I teach and I'm so excited for my students to explore these concepts and histories! Thank you!
Of course! Thank you for sharing my video with your class!
I see your work and I am profoundly grateful for it.
Thank you so much. I really appreciate the compliment!
Thank you for this video! Planning on doing my senior thesis inspired by Anzaldúas work. Appreciate your interpretation! ♥️
She was an inspiration to so many people when I was younger. As humans, we identified with her struggle and fight to be and explore all things that shape the self. As fellow Texans , her poetry and words of rebellious love were respected, didnt matter ethnicity or orientation, her search for meaning resonated , and continues to resonate, thanks for sharing. People today could use a reminder
Very thoughtful - thanks for taking the time to post this.
Just watched your video for my race and ethnics studies course, it made me feel very comfortable knowing that even though I don’t speak Spanish being a Mexican-American I can recognize myself through the mestiza consciousness
I’m happy I introduced you to Anzaldúa.
thank you for posting!
Thank you, thank you, thank you for this!!
you're so well spoken
Great work!
Great job!
You.Are.Amazing. Keep up your good work! 🦄🌈
Neplantera, en el 50th anniversary of Xican@ Moratorium, I've arrived in Nepantla.
Denis gracias. Do you have a lesson plan for middle school students? I will create one. Great interpretation!
I apologize for the late reply, I haven’t been getting notifications for comments. I do not, I’m not actually a teacher, but I love that Latinx History is being taught to middle school students!
It's very sad to not have Anzaldua around today when Latine folks in the US are trying to understand their place in the US while also having a reckoning with the whiteness that exists within our community. Many of us white/white-passing Latine, unfortunately, have co-opted this idea of mestiza to run away from the reality of our privilege, while at the same time showing little respect or acknowledgment to indigenous and black folks in our places of origin outside of these conversations to distance themselves from their fact of whiteness. While this mestiza consciousness is vital for the survival of truly intersectional folks, this "tolerance for ambiguity" can be dangerous when adopted by people for which ambiguity means nothingness instead of embracing everything as Anzaldua wished.
It's so strange for me hearing this because I'm yet another layer removed, into whiteness. I'm "a quarter Mexican" and within that, mestizx / chicanx. But my black hair and 'stache don't let me forget it, and I feel that despite the generations of "cleansing la raza", something of... all of this exists within me. But I'm hesitant to identify myself with it at all. My grandmother effectively "stopped being Mexican" when she got married, but you can't just undo who you are.
This pretty much sums my experience up, also quarter Mexican and lived in a predominantly white area. I couldn’t help but feel as though my “fellow”anglos always viewed me with a skeptic eye and knew I was somehow different than they were even if they weren’t sure of what my mixed heritage was.
Wow, Denis although I am not gay I can totally relate to not feeling like I belong to my own race because I am too gringa and also too Mexican to be American.
We are people that live on the borderlands. Anzaldúa’s words are for all of us!
While I don’t agree with the term latinx, I still respect people who do prefer to go by that label. Live and let live 🤝