In The Community
Gloria Anzaldúa: Trailblazer for the Queer Movement
Every Pride month we hear about various LGBTQ trail blazers but Gloria Anzaldúa especially deserves your attention.
Anzaldúa’s contributions to not only the queer community but also the Chicano/a/x movement make her an important figure to add to your list of true jefas standing in their truth.
Anzaldúa was born in 1942 to Spanish American and Native American parents in Rio Grande, Texas. Though initially affluent at the beginning of their marriage, Anzaldúa’s parents went from owning their own farmland to eventually being reduced to poverty and working the fields in order to support their family.
Her father soon realized that keeping the family in the Rio Grande area wouldn’t help to advance his daughter’s education and worked to relocate the family to Hargill, Texas. Anzaldúa would later credit this move to furthering her sympathy for the plight of immigrants and migrant workers alike, leading to her eventual status as an outspoken advocate for their rights.
Anzaldúa pursued higher education at University of Texas-Pan American (now University of Texas Rio Grande Valley), where she obtained a Bachelor of Arts in English, later conferring her Master of Arts in English at the University of Texas Austin.
This experience in higher education later went on to inspire much of Anzaldúa’s writings, including Anzaldúa’s intersectional approach to inclusivity when it came to cultural, queer, and feminist theory. Her 1981 essay La Prieta was featured in the book she co-edited, This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color. In La Prieta, Anzaldúa writes about the prejudices she faced growing up due to the darker color of her skin.
Gloria Anzaldua | Gloria in 1980, in San Francisco. | K. Kendall ...www.flickr.com
Arguably Anzaldúa’s most famous release is 1987’s Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza. In this novel, Anzaldúa muses over the concept of “borders” and how they impact different social perspectives we see. In Borderlands, Anzaldúa explores Chicano identity in white-centric society, lesbians in a heteronormative world, and the role of women in Hispanic society. By bringing to light the different spaces women can exist in, Anzaldúa was among those that paved the way for Latina/x focused feminist prose.
Though known primarily for Borderlands, Anzaldúa was also a very prominent activist in the Chicano movement. This movement’s prime years took place between 1965 until 1975, and was a vital social and political movement by those of Mexican descent in the United States. This movement was primarily led by activist legends César Chávez and Dolores Huerta as they supported farm workers in establishing unions that would allow them to earn fair wages and benefits.
File:Power 1123134053.gif - Wikimedia Commonscommons.wikimedia.org
The effects of this movement grew to empower others to claim back their power in their communities to be able to better control their schools, funding, and allocate resources to where they needed it most.
Though Anzaldúa’s legacy continues to be celebrated by many in the literary world, the mark she left behind that helped champion intersectionality through the lens of a queer brown woman is unarguably the reason she remains so relevant today.
There is no doubt that Gabby Rivera is a superhero of her own making. Her superpowers are writing, storytelling, and advocating for different communities through personal experiences as a Queer Puerto Rican Latina.
Rivera grew up in the Bronx, New York, in a traditional Latinx family where grades mattered, there was weekly mass, and like many other Latinx families, her parents were overprotective and wanted her to do the best in life. Rivera was always a storyteller; she grew up writing, reading, and surrounded by family members who loved storytelling.
With her experiences living in the Bronx, she wrote a young adult novel, “Juliet Takes a Breath” that was released in 2016 but republished in 2019. Her debut book about a Puerto Rican girl from the Bronx who navigates sexuality, family, and self-identity earned Rivera praise and awards including the 2017 Silver Independent Publisher Award for Best LGBTQ Fiction and the 2020 Gina Berriault Award.
Despite being the largest demographic of women of color in the U.S., coming in at about 32 million, Latinas oftentimes don’t see enough of themselves in books, especially in gender and cultural roles that are outside the dominant mainstream.
That’s where Rivera comes in.
Rivera writes for people to see themselves be represented. She works to create new narratives for people of color to read and relate to and she achieved exactly that when she became the writer for Marvel Comics’ “America.” America Chavez was a recurring figure in Young Avengers until Marvel tapped Rivera to write America’s first comic series featuring her as the lead character.
America is a badass queer woman who kicks ass and is authentically herself. In developing America as an evolving character, Rivera permitted America to be soft and vulnerable. Being vulnerable and feeling pain is something Rivera wishes she could offer to her female family members who were always tough for the sake of others.
Rivera advocates for QBIPOC issues through her writing and through other platforms. Her podcast, “Joy Uprising” is a place where she focuses on things and moments that bring people joy and how people prioritize that. Rivera easily conveys her positive spirit and life approach by uplifting people of color while tackling important issues like patriarchy, capitalism, and much more.
“How can we get joy if we’re not allowed to heal?,” Rivera has said.
For years now, she’s been in therapy for anxiety, depression, and so on. She’s been vocal about Latinx stigmas associated with mental healthcare such as therapy and healing from trauma. In her latest podcast episode, she speaks frankly and honestly about policy choices U.S. leaders are making. From the caging of undocumented people to the genocide of Native people, “this country doesn’t apologize for shit.”
Despite the hardships she faced, Rivera still wants to share the joys of being Latinx and has always encouraged self-love and acceptance for one’s identity. Gabby Rivera brings joy and positivity to communities that are often in deficit. Because of Rivera, more young girls will grow up reading stories where they can identify with the characters and their experiences, and that is one of the best superpowers there is.
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