An analysis of how gender hierarchies shape access to political voice and how women's intellectual contributions are devalued in identity construction.
Sor Juana's extraordinary intellectual achievements were constantly questioned, scrutinized, and delegitimized specifically because she was a woman. She faced pressure to abandon her studies and eventually was forced to renounce her intellectual work. This concept examines how patriarchal structures embed themselves in political identity narratives. Women are often represented as guardians of 'tradition' or 'culture' while being excluded from intellectual and political authority. Across cultures, women's political identity is constrained by gendered expectations. This framework asks: whose political voice is heard as authoritative? Whose intellectual work is attributed and celebrated? How do political institutions distribute knowledge-work according to gender? In multicultural contexts, gendered power operates intersectionally—Indigenous women, immigrant women, and women of color face compounded marginalization. Political identity becomes more complete and just when women are recognized as intellectual agents, decision-makers, and knowledge-creators. Sor Juana's refusal to be silenced models this demand for representation.
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