Princess Leia's hair really *is* modeled after Hopi hair. Damn.pic.twitter.com/uqlQauK03o
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CC @Pochdigeno, who tweeted at me that they're a geneticist, implying that Clara de la Rocha was indigenous. Right.
Clara de la Rocha's family was so rich they filled and entire library with gold and silver. Revolution, tho. Tuh.pic.twitter.com/sx3KHODBWY
Where did all that gold and silver come from? From the same indigenous peoples who were killed and displaced. Resources. Land. Life.
So @UnsettledCity's viral FB post is about a Mexican revolutionary woman. A *very* rich woman who's European family settled northern Mexico.
Lost in all of that? Hopi women. Hopi girls. Erased in preference for a tidy narrative about revolution... that lacks nuance.
I'll add one more thing and get back to my Saturday: Clara de la Rocha does not represent all Mexican revolutionary women, of course.
There were lots of indigenous women who were part of the Mexican Revolution. But different women fought for different things. Again: nuance.
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