Recognizing institutions as simultaneously oppressive and enabling—spaces that constrain and protect, that can shelter radical thought while enforcing conformity.
Sor Juana chose convent life partly because it offered education and autonomy unavailable to secular women in her time—yet it also subjected her to religious authority that eventually silenced her. Intersectional analysis must move beyond binary judgments of institutions as purely good or bad. Every system contains contradictions: workplaces that exploit yet provide income, families that harm yet offer belonging, movements that marginalize even as they fight oppression. This framework encourages practitioners to hold complexity: to use institutional resources strategically while remaining critically aware of their constraints, to build community within limiting structures while working toward transformation beyond them. Sor Juana's experience teaches that survival sometimes requires accepting contradictions rather than resolving them prematurely. This concept applies when individuals navigate institutional participation—recognizing that strategic use of imperfect spaces doesn't mean accepting their logic, and that resistance can take root in soil one didn't choose.
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