The privilege of access to institutions that validate and amplify intellectual work, paired with recognition that institutions simultaneously enable and constrain.
The convent provided Sor Juana with rare institutional support: protection, resources, library access, and a community that valued learning. Yet this same institution ultimately constrained her freedoms and contributed to her silencing. This concept examines the double nature of institutional privilege: institutions grant access and resources while exerting control. Those outside institutions lack platforms and legitimacy; those inside gain both but at a cost. Acknowledging institutional privilege means recognizing that credentials, publications, and networks depend on access most people never receive. It also means understanding that institutions perpetuate existing power structures even as they enable individual achievement. For those privileged by institutional belonging, this requires examining how we use that platform and whether we challenge or reinforce the gatekeeping that maintains institutional power. Sor Juana's relationship with the Church illustrates that institutional support is never neutral—it comes with implicit and explicit conditions, expectations, and limitations.
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