Historias Cruzadas -

(played by Cicely Tyson in flashbacks) is the film’s ghost—the absent center. Constantine raised Skeeter but was fired and disappeared without explanation. The mystery of Constantine drives Skeeter’s need to understand race relations. When Skeeter finally learns the truth—that Constantine was dismissed for having a light-skinned daughter, Rachel, who visited her—the film reveals that the deepest injury is not systemic racism but maternal betrayal by Skeeter’s own mother. This revelation personalizes racism as a family dysfunction, again shifting focus away from structural oppression and onto white familial reconciliation.

Upon release, Historias Cruzadas was embraced by general audiences and the Academy (four nominations, one win for Octavia Spencer). However, Black critics and scholars were sharply divided. Novelist Alice Walker praised its depiction of domestic labor, but others, including journalist Melissa Harris-Perry, condemned it as “a fantasy of the Civil Rights Movement.” The most sustained critique came from the Association of Black Women Historians, who issued a public statement arguing that the film “distorts, ignores, and trivializes the experiences of Black domestic workers” by omitting the sexual harassment, wage theft, and physical violence that were routine. They noted that the real-life maids who inspired the novel—specifically Ablene Cooper, who sued Stockett for using her likeness without permission—were not compensated or credited.

Historias Cruzadas is ultimately a film about empathy—specifically, about whether white empathy can be a sufficient engine for racial justice. Skeeter’s book succeeds in making the white women of Jackson uncomfortable; they fire their maids in retaliation, but they also confront their own cruelty. However, the film suggests that empathy without structural change is merely therapy. The maids lose their jobs; Hilly remains wealthy and unpunished (the pie incident is private revenge, not public justice); Skeeter moves to New York. In the final scene, as Aibileen walks down the road, the camera pulls back to show her alone, the white neighborhood receding behind her. She has her voice, but she has lost her livelihood.

The film’s central narrative device is Skeeter Phelan (Emma Stone) as the conduit for the maids’ stories. Skeeter is an archetypal outsider: she is tall, awkward, unmarried, and aspires to be a writer in a society that values women only as wives and mothers. Her return from college at Ole Miss positions her as having been “away” from Jackson’s insularity, lending her a critical perspective that the other white women lack. The film’s first act establishes Skeeter’s discomfort with Hilly’s overt racism, but it is her own domestic history—specifically, the mysterious disappearance of her beloved Black maid, Constantine—that motivates her project. Historias Cruzadas

represents a different mode of resistance: open insubordination. Minny is fired from multiple positions for “sass,” which the film codes as honesty and dignity. Her famous “terrible awful”—a chocolate pie baked with her own feces and served to Hilly Holbrook—is the film’s most discussed set piece. This act of scatological revenge is problematic for some critics, who argue it reduces Black resistance to a slapstick, bodily function; for others, it is a carnivalesque inversion of power, where the maid literally forces the mistress to consume her contempt. Minny’s arc culminates in her finding a benevolent employer in Celia Foote (Jessica Chastain), a white woman ostracized by the Junior League. This subplot offers a fantasy of interracial sisterhood unmediated by power hierarchies, but it also sidesteps the reality that Celia, despite her kindness, remains the owner of the house and Minny remains an employee.

The most visually striking sequence is the bathroom initiative. Hilly presents her plan to the Junior League with a diagram of a toilet, and the camera cuts to Aibileen listening from the kitchen. The white women speak in hushed, clinical tones about hygiene, while the Black women listen in silence. The subsequent montage—maids trudging out to outdoor toilets in the rain—uses high-contrast lighting and slow motion to emphasize humiliation. Yet the film stops short of showing the most degrading aspect: that these toilets were often unscreened, exposed to the elements and to the gaze of the white family. The film’s PG-13 rating ensures that the reality of segregation is suggested rather than depicted.

The Politics of Storytelling: Memory, Race, and Resistance in Historias Cruzadas ( The Help ) (played by Cicely Tyson in flashbacks) is the

Tate Taylor’s 2011 film Historias Cruzadas (adapted from Kathryn Stockett’s 2009 novel of the same name) presents a poignant, yet deeply contested, portrait of Black domestic workers in Jackson, Mississippi, during the early years of the Civil Rights Movement. Set against the backdrop of Jim Crow segregation, the film follows Eugenia “Skeeter” Phelan, a young white journalist, who collaborates with two Black maids—Aibileen Clark and Minny Jackson—to secretly compile a book detailing the experiences of maids working in white households. While the film was a commercial and critical success, earning a Best Picture nomination at the Academy Awards, it has also generated significant scholarly debate regarding its narrative perspective, historical accuracy, and ethical implications. This paper argues that Historias Cruzadas functions as a double-edged artifact: on one hand, it successfully humanizes the labor and emotional toll of domestic servitude, exposing the casual cruelties of systemic racism; on the other hand, it perpetuates a white-savior narrative that centers white female agency while marginalizing the very voices it claims to empower. Through an analysis of character archetypes, visual rhetoric, and historical contextualization, this paper will explore how the film navigates the treacherous terrain of representing racial trauma for a mainstream audience.

is the quiet revolutionary. Aibileen is a 53-year-old maid who has raised 17 white children. Her resistance is internal and cumulative: she keeps a secret journal, she prays daily, and she agrees to Skeeter’s project not out of ambition but out of grief for her own son, who died in a workplace accident that was ignored by white hospitals. Aibileen’s arc is one of finding voice; Viola Davis’s performance relies on micro-expressions—a lowered gaze, a trembling chin—that convey decades of suppressed rage. Her signature line, “You is kind, you is smart, you is important,” repeated to the toddler Mae Mobley, is an act of counter-narrative, replacing the white supremacist conditioning the child receives at home.

Director Tate Taylor uses mise-en-scène to emphasize the spatial logic of segregation. White homes are shown as bright, open, and airy—the Phelan house, Hilly’s colonial mansion, Celia’s tacky but spacious home. In contrast, Aibileen’s home is cramped, dark, and filled with religious iconography. The camera frequently frames maids in doorways, thresholds, and back hallways—liminal spaces where they are neither fully inside the family nor entirely outside. When Aibileen walks through the white living room to serve coffee, the camera tracks her as an intruder in a space she maintains but does not inhabit. When Skeeter finally learns the truth—that Constantine was

At the other extreme is , the white trash from Sugar Ditch. Celia is ignorant of racial etiquette precisely because she was never part of the white elite. She tries to eat with Minny, hugs her, and refuses to maintain distance. Celia’s role is to demonstrate that racism is learned, not natural. Yet her character also reinforces a stereotype: the only white person who can truly befriend a Black person is one who is herself a social outcast. This suggests that racial hierarchy is only a problem of the upper class, not a pervasive ideology.

To understand the stakes of Historias Cruzadas , one must first situate the narrative within its precise historical moment: the autumn of 1963, just before the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the subsequent passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Jackson was a epicenter of white supremacist resistance. The film alludes to real-world events—the 1962 Ole Miss riots, the bombing of Medgar Evers’s home (Evers is mentioned, though his assassination in June 1963 is not depicted). This period saw the rise of the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission, a state-funded agency that spied on and suppressed civil rights activists.

The film accurately depicts the dehumanizing infrastructure of segregation: separate bathrooms, the back-of-the-bus seating, and the casual use of racial epithets. However, critics note that the film sanitizes the extreme violence of the era. There are no lynchings, no police dogs, no firehoses. The primary villain, Hilly Holbrook, enforces social segregation through the “Home Help Sanitation Initiative”—a campaign for maids to use outdoor toilets—rather than through physical brutality. This choice, while making the film accessible to a broad audience, arguably dilutes the visceral terror that governed daily life for Black Mississippians. The film thus operates in a register of “comfortable discomfort,” where racism is mean and petty rather than genocidal.

The film offers three distinct models of resistance embodied by its central Black female characters.