Affirming inherent worth independent of state, institutional, or social acknowledgment.
Sor Juana claimed intellectual and spiritual dignity regardless of whether patriarchal institutions validated her. She asserted her right to exist, think, and create as self-evident, not contingent on permission. This principle becomes crucial for LGBTQ+ people in contexts where state recognition remains impossible or dangerous. While legal recognition matters—marriage equality, gender marker changes, anti-discrimination protections—dignity must not depend upon these victories. In countries where LGBTQ+ identity remains criminalized, communities sustain themselves through internal affirmation and cultural pride independent of state recognition. This concept rejects the framework that LGBTQ+ existence requires validation from dominant institutions; instead, it centers community-generated dignity, joy, and self-affirmation. It recognizes that pursuing recognition can inadvertently accept the premise that marginalized people require external legitimacy. Drawing on Sor Juana's assertion of inherent worth, this framework insists that LGBTQ+ people deserve dignity simply as human beings, not as reward for respectability or conformity. Global LGBTQ+ justice requires both institutional change and this deeper affirmation of unconditional worth.
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