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12017-08-14T13:04:17-07:00Linda Garcia Merchanta3f68ca10f2d1cb91b656cbe5b639a9893cb7c03202461Side eye is learned at a very young age.plain2017-08-14T13:04:17-07:00Linda Garcia Merchanta3f68ca10f2d1cb91b656cbe5b639a9893cb7c03
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12017-08-11T21:51:57-07:00The Side Eye and La Movida16plain2017-08-14T13:30:59-07:00What do you see out of the corner of your eye, is it a movida? (Please explain to the audience what is a movida). A movida is when something is happening over in a corner that needs to happen in a corner out of the range of prying eyes. A movida is never a constructive act, always resulting in the harm of someone or destruction of something. Movidas never happen alone or as isolated instances and are often generated by a “group of concerned citizens.” How to be mindful of the movida…frequent use of the side eye, el ojo detras, the eye behind your head. While humans don’t have the ability to see behind their heads, they do have a broad range of peripheral vision. Chicanas, when organizing or collaborating on an issue, synchronize their actions, like flying birds or swimming fish (see emergence), relying on the peripheral vision of the most external bird/fish—a trained Chicana side eye that catches every and all movidas going on, frequently generated by a “group of concerned citizens.”
Side eye is a learned behavior, notice the child in the photograph, practicing side eye and smiling as if the one action is unrelated to the other, or offering the untrained eye the suggestion that the child is up to something. In reality the child is practicing the hidden action behind the side-eye, eavesdropping on an unsuspecting adult, probably in the middle of a movida conversation with another adult. There will follow, in the car on the way home, conversation about la movida—in this way Chicana children are both curious and resourceful.