Understanding how Sor Juana used institutional constraints as a strategic platform, revealing how privilege is negotiated within systems of oppression.
Sor Juana entered the convent not primarily for religious vocation but for intellectual freedom—it was the only socially acceptable space where a woman could remain unmarried and pursue learning. This reveals a paradox: she gained privilege (access to books, time to write) by accepting severe limitations (vows, obedience, enclosure). Acknowledging privilege requires understanding these complex negotiations. The convent was simultaneously a prison and a sanctuary. Sor Juana's strategy teaches us that privilege is often conditional, partial, and purchased at a cost. She had intellectual freedom but lost bodily autonomy. She had status but within a rigid hierarchy. This concept examines how marginalized people strategically claim limited privileges within oppressive systems, and why acknowledging these arrangements is crucial—they reveal both the system's injustice and individuals' agency.
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