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Concept
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The Gendered Politics of Voice and Silence

How patriarchal and colonial power structures silence certain voices while amplifying others, and how marginalized subjects strategically deploy speech, writing, and deliberate silence.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's life exemplifies the gendered dimensions of political voice: her choice to become a nun partially reflected the impossibility of independent intellectual life as a secular woman, yet her writing became her political platform. She understood that for women and colonized subjects, the ability to speak publicly is itself a political achievement, not a given. Her eventual silencing—forced to renounce her writings and intellectual pursuits—reveals how political identity for the marginalized is precarious, constantly subject to revocation. In multicultural contexts, this concept addresses how certain groups are systematically excluded from public discourse, how accents and dialects are weaponized, how some narratives are centered while others are dismissed. It also acknowledges that silence can be strategic: Sor Juana's apparent submission masked continued intellectual work. The gendered politics of voice illuminates how political identity is negotiated through complex choices about when to speak, when to write, when to withhold—recognizing both constraint and agency in these decisions.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
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