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Chicano Quotes

Chicano quote from classy quote

I was the first Chicano to write in complete sentences.

~ Gary Soto

Gary Soto Chicano Poetry

No Statue of Liberty ever greeted our arrival in this country...we did not, in fact, come to the United States at all. The United States came to us.

~ Luis Valdez

Luis Valdez Chicano Freedom History Liberty Native American Society United States Usa

A group of ten prisoners from Dachau, I was with them, we hid in the forest to wait for the Americans. The Germans had already left everything behind. We had food but no weapons. For days we could hear bombs exploding around us. We just wanted to survive long enough for the Americans to control the territory. We didn’t want to die. At that point, our prison uniforms were the only things to keep us from being shot on the spot by the Americans. That was all we had. Who would the Americans believe? Real prisoners or guards dressed as prisoners? Those devils might even say we were the Germans. This was our nightmare.

~ Sergio Troncoso

Sergio Troncoso Antisemitism Chicano Hispanic Hispanic Identity Holocaust Denial Homophobia Latino Latino Literature Literature Murder Mystery Novels Philosophical Novels Philosophy Literature Righteous Gentile Righteousness Sergio Troncoso Yale Yale University

I held Angie Luna in that room for hours, and I remember the different times we made love like epochs in a civilization, each movement and every touch, apex upon abyss. In the luxury of our bed, we tried every position and every angle. I explored the curves on her body and delighted in seeing the freedom of her ecstasy. Her desperate whispers and pleas. I told her I loved her, and she said she loved me too. We lay in bed with our limbs entangled, in a pacific silence that reminded me of existing on a beach just for the sake of such an existence. I couldn't imagine the world ever becoming better, and for some strange reason the thought slipped into my head that I had suddenly grown to be an old man because I could only hope to repeat, but never improve on, a night like this. I finally took her home sometime when the interstate was empty, and the bridges seemed to lead to nowhere, for they were desolate too.

~ Sergio Troncoso

Sergio Troncoso Chicano Hispanic Latino Literature Love Love Story Lovers Mexican American Mexican Americans Relationships Sergio Troncoso Short Stories Stories

We’re afraid the others will think we’re agringadas because we don’t speak Chicano Spanish. We oppress each other trying to out-Chicano each other, vying to be “real” Chicanas, to speak like Chicanos. There is no one Chicano language just as there is no one Chicano experience.

~ Gloria E. Anzaldúa

Gloria E. Anzaldúa Chicana Chicano Chicanos Identity Internalized Racism

We were to write a short essay on one of the works we read in the course and relate it to our lives. I chose the Allegory of the Cave in Plato's Republic. I compared my childhood of growing up in a family of migrant workers with the prisoners who were in a dark cave chained to the floor and facing a blank wall. I wrote that, like the captives, my family and other migrant workers were shackled to the fields day after day, seven days a week, week after week, being paid very little and living in tents or old garages that had dirt floors, no indoor plumbing, no electricity. I described how the daily struggle to simply put food on our tables kept us from breaking the shackles, from turning our lives around. I explained that faith and hope for a better life kept us going. I identified with the prisoner who managed to escape and with his sense of obligation to return to the cave and help others break free.

~ Francisco Jiménez

Francisco Jiménez Chicano Civil Rights Honor Hope Integrity Justice

I hated seeing these spasmodic upside-down chicken heads stretching to puncture my flesh. I imagined once that they reached my groin and pecked out my penis and my huevos and kept pecking until they got to my gut and my eyes and my brain, until I was just a pecked-out piece of human meat surrounded by thousands of nervous, dirty white chickens. I think that was about the time I fucked up a pair of chicken heads against a warehouse wall when no one was looking. Well, almost no one. Rueben was right behind me, and that's when he grinned his stupid grin. Maybe he hated the chickens as much as I did. Maybe he just knew que ya me iba también a la chingada. Maybe I was going on my first joy ride to hell and back, and it was fun to watch.

~ Sergio Troncoso

Sergio Troncoso Chicano El Paso Texas Family Relationships Hispanic American Hispanic Identity Immigrant Experience Immigrant Fiction Immigrants Latino Sergio Troncoso Short Stories Short Story Collection Stories Texas
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