Nosotros vs nosotras…imagine if in English, women had to always refer to themselves as male?How would we feel? #chst404
— Michelle Badillo (@MichelleBLMU) March 11, 2012
“We are robbed of our female being by the masculine plural.” (page 76) #chst404
— Carmen Castaneda (@ccastan5) March 12, 2012
Hocicona, repelona, chismosa, derogatory terms if applied to women but never applied to men. #chst404
— Carmen Castaneda (@ccastan5) March 12, 2012
If talking back seems unladylike, what about having an opinion? #chst404
— Beatriz Alfaro (@MissBeatriz25) March 11, 2012
“The dominant white culture is killing us slowly with its ignorance” (86) #chst404
— kelsey (@kchine23) March 12, 2012
the robbing of a language SHOULD be seen as an act of war, but a war that also happens within schools, families, and within oneself #CHST404
— Stephanie Troncoso (@steftroncoso) March 12, 2012
in ch 5 it was deep when it was said that even though Chicano/as are 70-80% indian, they are called spanish or mexican American #chst404
— kelsey (@kchine23) March 12, 2012