The paradox of institutional protection that also constrains: Sor Juana's convent offered her unusual intellectual freedom while remaining a space of control.
Sor Juana entered the convent partly to escape marriage and gain access to libraries and learning unavailable to women outside its walls. Yet the convent was also a cage: she required permission for her intellectual pursuits and faced increasing pressure from her confessor and ecclesiastical superiors to abandon writing. This concept explores how marginalized people sometimes find refuge within oppressive institutions, creating pockets of resistance and autonomy even while remaining subject to control. Civil disobedience in such contexts is necessarily subtle—working within constraints to carve out space for forbidden thought and work. The convent model appears throughout history: churches sheltering refugees, universities providing intellectual asylum, even prisons becoming sites of political education. This concept asks: how do we practice resistance when we depend on the system we resist? How do we refuse complicity while remaining within institutions? Sor Juana's answer was strategic compromise paired with intellectual integrity.
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