The practice of questioning and critiquing institutions and authorities while remaining within them, as a strategy for maintaining dignity and safety.
Sor Juana's position was paradoxical: she critiqued patriarchal and institutional power while remaining dependent on and embedded within those structures. She navigated this through careful rhetoric, indirect argument, and strategic positioning—not as compromise but as a sophisticated practice of self-preservation and integrity. For Pacific gender-diverse individuals, particularly in conservative or restrictive contexts, institutional critique as self-preservation means developing practices of questioning and resistance that work within available spaces. This might include: questioning gender norms while maintaining family or community relationships; pursuing education or work that validates identity without requiring public declaration; using spiritual or cultural frameworks to articulate gender diversity without terminology that triggers institutional rejection. This concept honors that not all resistance is dramatic or public, and that sophisticated critique from within institutions can be safer and more effective than confrontation. It validates multiple strategies of integrity depending on context and risk.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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