Understanding how poverty intersects with gender, race, illegitimacy, and other forms of marginalization to create complex identity challenges.
Sor Juana experienced poverty not in isolation but in intersection with gender oppression, racial classification as creola, the stigma of illegitimacy, and the constraints of being a woman in intellectual life. This concept applies intersectional analysis to understanding poverty and identity. Poverty rarely exists as a single axis of marginalization; it is typically interwoven with gender, race, disability, immigration status, sexuality, and other dimensions of identity. Each intersection creates specific vulnerabilities and also specific strengths and forms of knowledge. For Sor Juana, her identity as a poor woman of mixed race gave her particular insight into justice and power, but also particular danger. Understanding one's poverty through intersectional lens means recognizing both the compounded difficulties faced and the unique understanding and resilience that come from navigating multiple systems simultaneously. This concept suggests that poverty-experienced communities contain wisdom that comes from navigating complexity, and that addressing poverty requires attention to all dimensions of identity and marginalization.
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