Skip to main content

Book Review: Chingona - Owning Your Inner Badass

Editor's Note: This review was originally published in Seattle Book Review.

 

Dr. Alma Zaragoza-Petty

In a world where women continue to experience marginalization based on societal expectations and norms, there can never be enough affirmation of feminine power and agency. Scholar and activist Dr. Alma Zaragoza-Petty discusses her experiences straddling identities as a first-generation Mexican-American with solid roots in Acapulco and Los Angeles to invite Brown and Black women to own their “inner badass” in Chingona, her inspiring debut.

In Spanish, the term holds derogatory connotations about a woman’s place, frowned-upon behavior, and existence in patriarchal spaces. Zaragoza-Petty explains her journey through defining her faith, exercising leadership, and reclaiming the word for empowerment to champion justice and equity and embrace her destiny to serve others.

Reading the book from my perspective as an immigrant woman of color, I found Zaragoza-Petty’s words encouraging and uplifting. Her writing is raw and powerful and appeals to the hearts of women who have experienced and internalized messages that diminish one’s self-worth. I appreciated learning about the cultural nuances of the term “chingona” and the rising movement among women-identified Latina/e/x who strengthen their resolve by overcoming personal and collective trauma.

As a social justice advocate whose influences include bell hooks, Gloria Anzaldua, and Pablo Freire, the author helps us understand how courage and badassery can create change to benefit communities. 

Buy from Capital Books


Popular posts from this blog

Medicine Wheel for the Planet

Jennifer Grenz, PhD       Working toward ecological healing requires awareness of how Indigenous ancestral knowledge and living ways can complement Western scientific approaches to environmental restoration and protection practices. Dr. Jennifer Grenz (Nlaxa’pamux mixed ancestry) worked for more than two decades as a field researcher and practitioner for environmental nonprofit organizations, where she worked with different levels of government, including First Nations in Canada. "Medicine Wheel for the Planet" compiles Grenz’s most potent realizations about the lack of forward movement in addressing an impending ecological catastrophe.  A warming climate impacts not only human lives but also the natural balance that relies on reciprocal relationships rooted in deep connections to the land. She uses the metaphor of the four directions of the Indigenous “medicine wheel” to invite openness to Indigenous teachings, letting go of colonial narratives, merging lessons f...

Memento - Embracing the Darkness

Dennis "Dizzy" Doan Stories about overcoming and persevering through family dysfunction, poverty, and mental health challenges offer hope and the promise of better days. Dennis “Dizzy” Doan’s memoir Memento: Embracing the Darkness is one such story, with the added complexity of being raised in an immigrant Vietnamese family. Doan’s parents dealt with the mental and emotional aftermath of war, which forcibly uprooted them from their homeland. In the United States, they struggled to create a safe and stable life for their two sons. Doan shares his journey of finding himself, his craft, and eventually a successful tattoo business in Southern California despite personal strife and run-ins with the law. Doan is best known for developing the aesthetic language to combat anti-Asian hate that erupted during the COVID-19 pandemic. His art series titled “Model Minority” went viral, sparking conversation about Asian American identities and harmful stereotypes. In Memento, Doan showcase...

Lucky Tomorrow: Stories

Deborah Jiang-Stein's debut collection of short stories explores the lives of people who are often overlooked. From flower street vendors to families torn apart by ambition, to a woman on death row awaiting redemption amidst a tumult of memories, Jiang-Stein vividly depicts their struggles. Each story is set in various cities where she has lived: Seattle, Minneapolis, and Tokyo. While these settings differ, they share a common indifference toward human suffering. In "Lucky Tomorrow, " each vignette offers a glimpse into harsh realities that are often difficult to confront, yet are grounded in the lived experiences of those frequently unseen and cast aside. The stories convey powerful themes of longing and fleeting hopes for fresh starts that may never arrive. Although the themes are specific to the characters, they resonate with the universal human experience. As an activist and advocate, Jiang-Stein has made a significant impact through her extensive work with women...