The mutual obligations between those of different ranks and roles, where deference and respect flow both upward and downward.
Sor Juana's letters to her superiors show sophisticated understanding of hierarchical relationship: respect was owed upward, but so were truth-telling and honest counsel. Confucian role identity rests on hierarchical reciprocity—you defer to superiors, but they also have duties toward you. This is not domination but relational responsibility. In family, workplace, community, and institutions, roles are arranged in structures of authority, but these structures carry ethical obligations in both directions. A supervisor owes guidance and fairness; a subordinate owes diligence and honesty. Parents provide nurturance; children provide filial respect and eventual care. Understanding your roles means knowing both your upward obligations and what you legitimately expect from those above you. Sor Juana claimed her right to intellectual pursuit not as rebellion but as proper reciprocal demand within hierarchical bonds.
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