How gender prescriptions function as core Confucian role definitions, and how historical women expanded, reinterpreted, or strategically inhabited these roles.
Confucian role ethics prescribe specific virtues, behaviors, and capabilities for men and women: women's virtue centered on obedience, service, and sexual purity; intellectual and political roles were male. Sor Juana lived within this system yet persistently inhabited her gender role differently—as a space for learning, not just domesticity. She was a woman (role acceptance) and a scholar (role expansion), showing these were not inherently contradictory. Gender in Confucian systems is not mere biology but role assignment with profound philosophical backing. Understanding gender as a role category—rather than biological essence—allows strategic navigation: What are the actual expectations? Where is flexibility? How have other women reinterpreted these roles? For modern people with complex gender identities, this offers framework: How do you relate to the gender roles your culture assigned? Do you accept, modify, reject, or creatively inhabit them? Sor Juana's example shows that genuine identity work often means working through, not around, assigned roles.
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