Recognition that how society defines and categorizes individuals directly determines their access to rights, resources, and dignity—making identity politics inseparable from fairness.
Sor Juana occupied multiple contradictory identities: a woman in a male intellectual sphere, a Creole in a Spanish colonial hierarchy, a nun claiming secular authority, a servant-genius in a feudal structure. Her struggle reveals that fairness cannot ignore identity categories because societies actively use them to distribute justice unequally. Being labeled 'woman,' 'indigenous,' 'foreigner,' or 'lower-caste' determines one's legal standing, educational access, and voice in community decisions. Fair civilizations must interrogate their identity systems—who gets counted as a knower, a citizen, a person worthy of consideration? Sor Juana's life proves that failing to address identity injustice while claiming abstract fairness perpetuates concrete harm.
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