The framework of recognizing how multiple overlapping restrictions force creative innovation in expression, strategy, and identity navigation.
Sor Juana lived under constraints: as a woman, as a mestiza, as a religious subject, and as an intellectual in colonial Mexico. Rather than viewing constraints as purely limiting, this concept examines how intersecting pressures often generate creative solutions and hybrid strategies. In intersectional practice, this means understanding that people holding multiple marginalized identities develop sophisticated adaptive skills—code-switching, strategic visibility, resourceful networking—not out of weakness but from necessity. Sor Juana used poetry and religious allegory to address philosophy and politics; she used letters to engage in debate she was prohibited from pursuing publicly. This framework validates the innovation and resilience of multiply-marginalized people while recognizing that such adaptation, though powerful, should not replace systemic change or excuse oppressive constraints.
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