The specific ways women's intellectual and spiritual authority is denied, delegitimized, or required to submit to male hierarchies within religious systems.
Sor Juana was not merely silenced as a heretic but as a woman claiming intellectual and interpretive authority in a male-dominated Church. Her gender compounded her transgression. This concept examines how religious identity—belief, doubt, departure—is structured differently for women by patriarchal theology and institutional power. Women believers in such systems face a double bind: full participation requires intellectual submission to male authority. Women doubters cannot claim the role of loyal questioner as easily as men. Women leavers may depart not only from faith but from family and community structures built on gendered obedience. For men exploring religious identity, this concept illuminates an unexamined privilege—their questions are more readily heard, their doubts more acceptable, their departures less socially catastrophic. Understanding the gendered dimension permits more honest self-assessment: what parts of your religious identity are chosen, and what parts are enforced by your position in a hierarchy?
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