The recognition that decolonization must address patriarchal structures inherited and reinforced by colonialism, centering women's intellectual and political authority.
Sor Juana's struggle was inseparable from her gender; she faced opposition not only as a colonized American subject but as a woman claiming intellectual authority in male-dominated institutions. Postcolonial and decolonial movements have historically marginalized women while claiming to liberate nations, often re-inscribing patriarchal norms as authentic cultural tradition. Gendered decolonization insists that liberation cannot be real if half the population remains subordinate. Women's intellectual rights—the claim that women possess equal capacity for and right to knowledge production, public voice, and institutional power—are foundational to authentic decolonization. Sor Juana's defense of women's education, her insistence on her own intellectual worth despite religious and gendered constraints, and her modeling of female scholarship established that women are not incidental to postcolonial projects but central to them. For contemporary movements, this means ensuring that decolonial knowledge systems, institutions, and narratives are generated and led by women, that female intellectuals are recognized and supported, and that gendered analysis remains central to understanding how colonialism operated and how decolonization must proceed.
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