Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intersectional Identity as Political Ground

The recognition that oppression operates simultaneously across multiple dimensions—gender, class, race, colonial status—requiring resistance strategies that address layered, interconnected injustices.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana inhabited a complex position: a woman in a patriarchal society, a creole in a colonial hierarchy, an intellectual among the clergy, a nun claiming autonomy, a Baroque voice in a silencing institution. Her resistance could not address gender alone without acknowledging colonialism; could not claim intellectual rights without confronting religious authority. This framework, now called intersectionality, emerged from her historical moment and illuminates how civil disobedience movements must recognize that individuals experience oppression across multiple systems simultaneously. A women's rights movement that ignores colonialism, a labor movement blind to racial hierarchy, or an anti-colonial struggle that maintains patriarchy each misunderstand the full scope of injustice. Across traditions, this concept explains why marginalized communities develop more sophisticated analysis: they experience oppression's interconnections directly. Civil disobedience becomes more strategic and transformative when it addresses these layered injustices together.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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