Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Gendered Body, Ungendered Mind

Exploring the tension between physical sex/gender and intellectual capacity, and how identity emerges from refusing false limitations.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana lived the contradiction between a female body and intellectual capacity deemed 'masculine.' She wrote and spoke of the mind as transcending sex, yet her body was always marked as female and therefore suspect, dangerous, or inappropriate in intellectual spaces. This contradiction is central to her work and remains crucial for understanding body as identity. Physical self-concept is never simple because our bodies are read by others according to social meanings we did not choose. Sor Juana's response was neither to deny her body nor to accept imposed limitations—she insisted on the right to be fully both: a woman and a scholar, embodied and intellectual. This framework teaches that authentic identity requires holding this tension rather than resolving it through false unity. Our bodies carry gendered and racialized meanings imposed by power structures, yet we are not reducible to those readings. Body as identity means claiming the complexity: the physical self is real, particular, and meaningful, while also refusing to let others' interpretations of that physicality limit our rights or capacities.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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