Recognizing how multiple oppressive systems—gender, race, class, religion, institutional power—work together and demand multi-layered responses.
Sor Juana was a woman (denied authority), of mixed racial heritage (subordinated in a caste system), of modest economic means (dependent on patronage), and enslaved to institutional religious authority. Yet she wrote and thought across all these intersecting constraints. She understood that her oppression was not simply about being female; it was the specific collision of her gender, her intellectual ambitions, her race, her economic vulnerability, and her position within the Church. This intersectional awareness informed her work—she never treated any single axis of injustice in isolation. Living justly in an unjust world requires this same intersectional consciousness: recognizing that systems of oppression are interconnected, that justice work must address multiple forms of domination simultaneously, and that people experience injustice at the intersection of their identities. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that true justice work is complex, multidimensional, and requires understanding how power operates across all dimensions of a person's existence.
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