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Named after "a Mexican feminist organization that worked against the Porfirio Díaz dictatorship in Mexico", Hijas de Cuauhtémoc focused on issues specific to Chicanas, such as gender and sexuality. Despite running for only a few issues, the magazine's "coverage of the social and economic marginalization of Chicanas in American society, and of the perpetuation of historical and contemporary stereotypes of Chicanas, provide critical documents of [the early 1970s]".

The motives of the Hijas de Cuahtemoc were broad in a sense for the new-wave of feminism.

The Hijas de Cuahtemoc received some sort of backlash against their views once they published their first article. A group of individuals came together to build a faux grave-site for the creators of the magazine, signifying that their academic careers were "dead." The creators of the faux grave-site used headstones with Anna Nieto-Gomez's name, birth date and the date the magazine was released, showing that was the day her career ended.