Recognition that colonialism and patriarchy intersect to erase women's intellectual contributions, requiring deliberate recovery work in decolonization.
Sor Juana's marginalization despite genius-level scholarship reveals how gender compounded colonial intellectual hierarchies. Women's knowledge work—philosophy, science, theology, literature—was systematically erased or attributed to men. Postcolonial decolonization cannot ignore this dual invisibility: women of color face colonialism and misogyny simultaneously. Recovery work means excavating women's writings, oral histories, and scientific practices from colonial archives where they were buried or distorted. Sor Juana's rediscovery in contemporary scholarship models this process. Decolonization requires feminist methodology—centering women's voices, acknowledging care work as intellectual labor, and challenging patriarchal structures within postcolonial movements themselves. Without gender analysis, decolonization merely replaces colonial patriarchy with indigenous patriarchy. Recognizing women's intellectual autonomy becomes essential to building just postcolonial societies.
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