Queering Mexican Spanish

The traditional Mexican “Loteria” game

By Brain El Oso

Mexican Spanish is very distinct, as any child or language learner will see. The game “Loteria” is a very common way of teaching both the language and the customs, and it is so ubiquitous in Mexico that you might notice that the logo of Corona Beer is very similar to the “La Corona” card in this game. There are also several words in the game that are specific to Mexico, such as instruments like the “bandolo,” the apache, and the “catrin.” As a result, Loteria is not only a way to learn a lot of vocabulary, it is also seen as a way of co-constructing Mexican identity. I first encountered the game as a Spanish student in Mexico. You play it basically like Bingo: you take a game card with a bunch of squares on it, and then turn over the individual cards and call out the names (there is a very theatrical way of doing this, which my Spanish teacher liked to mimic). The first player to cover all of their cards calls out “Loteria!”

Continue reading “Queering Mexican Spanish”

Paris is Burning, Polari, Drag Race, and the Decades-Long Journey for Queer Slang to Go Mainstream

Brian–Blog post #2

I first saw Paris is Burning a few weeks after 9/11, and the film had a tragic air to it. Though it had been released just eleven years earlier, in 1990, it seemed like a relic from a different era, right from the opening shot of the Twin Towers. The majority of the people who had participated in the documentary, primarily black and Latinx, were already dead then: the first before the film was even completed, murdered and abandoned beneath a dingy hotel bed, and the rest from AIDS-related illnesses. But it also seemed culturally irrelevant as flag-waving, the Patriot Act, and the War on Terror swept the US. It was exactly at this time, in fact, that the most famous drag queen, RuPaul, who I had seen in a recurring role on The Tonight Show, began a two-year sabbatical, knowing that there was little opportunity during such a conservative period.

Continue reading “Paris is Burning, Polari, Drag Race, and the Decades-Long Journey for Queer Slang to Go Mainstream”
css.php