Creating spaces where people with different subject positions can engage in rigorous thinking together without erasing power differences.
Sor Juana maintained correspondence with intellectuals, patrons, and fellow thinkers despite her isolation in the convent. These relationships weren't symmetrical—some involved risk, some compromise, some genuine intellectual kinship. Building community across difference is central to intersectional practice, yet it's complicated: solidarity isn't sameness, and shared commitment to justice doesn't eliminate power imbalances. Sor Juana's example teaches careful relationship-building: being generous with ideas while protecting boundaries, offering intellectual labor without erasing your own needs, seeking mentorship and offering it. This means creating learning communities that acknowledge rather than ignore power dynamics, where people can be honest about different material conditions and access to resources. It means recognizing that those from dominant groups may need to do more listening, more learning, more supporting—not as charity but as justice. Intellectual community across difference is possible and necessary, but only with intentionality.
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