Previously used for Latin American Studies 303

Fighting in a Skirt

Okay, first things first with The Fighting Cholitas short film, how rad are these women?! Let’s take a minute to celebrate that. I mean, fighting in a skirt? That’s the kind of hard core I love to see. Break those stereotypes and societal expectations (if I could put clapping emojis here, I would). Even more than that, though, is what the fights mean to them and what they have to go through in order to be a part of it.

They use the fights as an opportunity to ask for justice. The ring is their place to show the bravery that they hold inside of them constantly, to demonstrate their strength, their power, su fuerza. Even it is over-dramatic at times, and dangerous, and people think that they shouldn’t be fighting because they’re cholitas… They love it so much, and they keep going. It’s become an integral part of their life. They’re even willing to sneak out (more or less) to train. Because even though there are parts of it that are an act (the roles that they take up, the two sides ‘tecnica’ vs. ‘ruda’, the laughter of a ruda after hitting down a técnica), they know that there are other parts that are real. The pain that the women feel. That’s real. That line hit me so deep.

It was International Women’s Day yesterday, and I saw a video of a cover of a song called “Canción sin Miedo” by Vivir Quintana. The song talks about violence against women, giving specific examples from Latin America, and the response that that violence brings about. It talks about asking for justice, and one of the first lines is “hoy a las mujeres nos quitan la calma” which roughly translates to “today the women’s calm is taken away”.  It reminded me of the cholitas, and of the way that some of them say that they change when they’re in the ring. I think maybe that’s a part of it, anyways, that the ring is their place to lose their calm.

As women in general, we’re expected to stay calm and reserved. This is likely especially true for the cholitas as they are seen as housewives, meant to cook and clean and care for their husbands and nothing more. As I’ve said in the past, I have absolutely nothing against this. What I actually really liked about the cholitas is that they aren’t fighting in spite of their identity, but they’re uniting the two. They’re saying that they can be both-and. They can wear their layered skirts and care for their families, and they can wear their skirts and fight.

And I mean seriously though y’all. Think about fighting in a skirt. Can you imagine the range, the movement, the FLOW? It’s been days since I watched the film and I still just can’t get over it. Incredible.

So my question for the class is this: what do you think it means to frequent spectators that the cholitas wear their skirts?

*Here’s a link to the cover that I saw,  and here’s a link to the original song.*

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