The deliberate use of ambiguity, allusion, and symbolic language to communicate across censorship and hostile audiences.
Sor Juana wrote in forms—villancicos, dramatic pieces, love poetry—that allowed her to discuss forbidden topics indirectly: women's autonomy, religious authority, intellectual equality. Her meanings operated on multiple levels, legible to informed readers while appearing innocuous to censors. This was not obscurantism but strategic necessity. For intersectional communities today, this concept validates the sophisticated communicative practices that emerge under pressure: slang, coded language, memes, and symbolic expression that insiders understand while remaining somewhat opaque to those in power. These aren't inferior forms of communication but creative adaptations to hostile environments. Understanding coded communication prevents outsiders from dismissing marginalized speech as unclear or unsophisticated, instead recognizing it as evidence of intelligence operating under constraint. It honors the linguistic creativity that intersectional subjects develop for safety and solidarity.
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