The practice of holding multiple, seemingly opposing truths simultaneously—a skill essential for navigating overlapping systems of oppression without reducing identity to single dimensions.
Sor Juana lived within profound contradictions: a brilliant woman in a patriarchal system, a nun questioning religious authority, a colonial subject asserting intellectual agency. Rather than resolving these tensions, she inhabited them with precision and purpose. In intersectional practice, contradictions arise constantly—one can be both privileged and marginalized depending on context, both complicit in and resistant to systems of power. This concept invites practitioners to resist the urge to flatten identity into coherence and instead develop the intellectual rigor to hold multiple truths. Sor Juana's example teaches that contradictions need not paralyze; they can sharpen analysis and deepen understanding. By practicing comfort with contradiction, individuals and communities build capacity to navigate intersectionality's central insight: that we occupy multiple, overlapping positions simultaneously.
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