The navigation of multiple, sometimes contradictory identities (nun, woman, intellectual, colonial subject, Mexican) without surrendering intellectual honesty or moral integrity—a model for future border-crossing thinkers.
Sor Juana inhabited multiple worlds: the convent and the intellectual salon, Catholic orthodoxy and critical questioning, Mexican and European traditions. Rather than resolve these tensions by choosing one identity, she held them in creative tension, drawing on each while maintaining her intellectual integrity. For intergenerational justice, this is essential: future generations will inherit even more complex, hybrid identities and will face pressure to compartmentalize or surrender parts of themselves. Sor Juana shows that it is possible to live multiple identities authentically while remaining intellectually honest. This matters intergenerationally because enforced simplification of identity—forced assimilation, denial of heritage, fragmentation of self—diminishes human flourishing and wisdom. We owe future generations permission and models for integrating their multiple inheritances. Justice includes protecting the space for people to draw on diverse traditions, to hold multiple perspectives, and to develop synthetic wisdom rather than forced coherence.
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