The trap where individual achievement within oppressive systems can isolate you from community and neutralize your radical potential through tokenization.
Sor Juana gained education and prominence partly because she was exceptional, partly because her patrons found her useful as a showpiece of their enlightenment. Yet this 'success' also separated her from other women, enslaved people, and Indigenous people facing the same systemic barriers. The paradox of exceptional access describes how systems allow individual 'special cases' to break through while leaving structures intact—often co-opting those individuals to legitimize the system. In intersectional work, this appears when one marginalized person achieves prominence and is pressured to represent their entire group, to remain 'exceptional' and non-threatening, or to distance themselves from their community. Understanding this paradox, through Sor Juana's experience, helps us recognize when individual advancement might reinforce rather than challenge oppression. It demands asking: Are we building access for all, or creating isolated exceptions? How do we prevent intersectional work from being absorbed into systems it should transform?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.