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Ellas


Jul 14, 2019

SHOW NOTES:

Every generation of Latinas has paved the way for future generations to start their path without the weight and stigma that our sisters had to bear. 

 

In today’s episode of Ellas, we talk with Chicanita scholar and storyteller, Aneliza Ruiz, who shares the stories of fantastic L.A. girl gangs that paved the way for our generation: Pachucas and Cholas.

 

Aneliza Ruiz is a Barnard College graduate that wrote her thesis: Girls, Gangs, y Chingonas: Women, Art, and Home-work in Los Angeles

 

This vital thesis centers on our Pachuca and Chola sisters and how they’ve rewritten traditional Mexican traditions and found their own voice and agency through fashion, beauty, and art. 

 

She also shares how her upbringing in East L.A. has shaped her identity which ultimately inspired her to research, interview, and share the stories of these women. 

 

We deep dive into Aneliza’s thesis, talk about her educational experience in an Ivy League, and the support system she created with her fellow community of women of color.

 

In the last minutes of this episode, Brenda Deshazer makes an important announcement, so stick to the end to listen!

 

In this episode, we talk about…

 

0:32 - Meet scholar and storyteller, Aneliza Ruiz 

1:52 - Discover how Aneliza’s community of East L.A. has shaped her identity and academic career

5:33 - “You’re from a marginalized community - you need to go to college if you’re going to live.”

7:04 - Aneliza shares how she felt she wasn’t well represented in her classes, but she had the leverage to inspire and drive her to tell a different story of her community

9:52 - Imposter syndrome was hard, but Aneliza was saved and encouraged by her fellow community of women of color

13:01 - “This is not the story I wanted to tell. I wanted to write for my community, instead, I wrote for you guys.”

15:01 - There’s a certain thing that happens when you call attention to race in a room full of white people and they feel uncomfortable

18:52 - Aneliza shares how her research work was very solitary and how her girl gang encouraged her to write her thesis

21:12 - Learn the difference between homemaking and home-work

25:57 - Find out how Pachucas and Pachucos emerged in the U.S.

26:48 - Discover how Pachucas rewrote their home-work with their stylish and opulent Zoot Suit

30:23 - Did you know that there are two different Chola aesthetics? Find out the difference between Norteñas & Sureñas  

35:21 - One pencil for a badass makeup look

37:17 - Find out how Chicanas have rewritten home-work in art 

41:27 - Pachucas, Cholas, Chicanas, Latinas - we’re all CHINGONAS 

43:56 - Aneliza’s path is just beginning, find out how she’s continuing to rewrite her own home-work

46:34 - Aneliza’s shares advice to the next generation of chingonas 

48:25 - Listen to Brenda Deshazer’s important announcement 

 

Relevant Links

 

Barnard College 

 

Columbia University

 

Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies

 

Cholas

 

Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship 

 

UCLA

 

Juan Gabriel

 

Mexican and Mexican Mass Deportation During the 30’s & 40’s

 

Pachucas

 

The Great Depression

 

The Pachuca Zoot Suit 

 

Los Angeles Library

 

Pachucas in a police lineup

 

Norma Mendoza-Denton

 

Maybelline 

 

Aqua Net 

 

Originals Magazine

 

Scalar

 

Oprah

 

Ellen DeGeneres

 

Want more?

Follow Ellas: @ellasthepodcast

Follow Us: @bee.andi & @bren_jai

Follow Aneliza's Project: @home_workforchingonas

Produced and Edited by: Devell Deshazer II

Song by: Sro CC by SA