The practice of exercising real power and influence within limited institutional spaces, without waiting for total liberation to act.
Sor Juana was not free—she was a nun under church authority in a colonial empire. Yet within that constraint, she claimed remarkable authority: she wrote, advised nobles, defended her right to learn, shaped intellectual culture. She did not wait for perfect freedom to act. In intersectional work, this is crucial. People rarely have total freedom; they have positions, small platforms, relationships, skills, access. Claiming authority within constraint means: the teacher who makes her classroom a space of critical consciousness; the social worker who bends rules to help clients; the elder who passes down forbidden knowledge to young people; the person with a small platform who uses it to amplify silenced voices. This is not settling for crumbs but strategic use of actual power in actual conditions. Intersectional practice recognizes that transformation happens within systems by people who refuse to be powerless even when the system denies them power.
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