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Concept
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The Convento as Confucian Household

An institutional framework for role-based living that parallels Confucian household hierarchy and mutual obligation.

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Why It Matters

Sor Juana chose the convent partly as a space where intellectual role could be pursued within institutional structure. The convent functioned as a household-like entity with hierarchies, duties, mutual obligations, and communal life—mirroring Confucian ideals of the family as foundational social unit. Within this structure, roles of abbess, scholar-nun, and servant created a framework where individual identity was defined relationally and hierarchically. In Confucian thought, the household is the primary model for all social organization; understanding how Sor Juana inhabited the convent as a role-based community illuminates how institutions can embody Confucian principles. The concept recognizes that role identity flourishes not in isolation but within structured communities where reciprocal obligations are acknowledged. For contemporary practitioners, this suggests that Confucian role identity requires institutional context—whether family, workplace, or community—where hierarchy and mutual responsibility are recognized and enacted.

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