The complex political positioning required when one holds multiple marginalized identities simultaneously across colonial, gender, class, and knowledge hierarchies.
Sor Juana was a woman, a creole colonial subject, of mixed racial heritage, and intellectually ambitious—each identity marked her as inappropriate for positions of authority. Rather than choosing one identity or suppressing others, she navigated and integrated them, leveraging her ambiguous positioning to claim spaces for intellectual work. This concept addresses how political identity forms at intersections of multiple systems of marginalization, requiring different strategies than fighting single-axis oppression. Across cultures, this appears in how colonial subjects navigate race and class, how immigrant women negotiate gender and cultural expectations, how LGBTQ+ people of color manage overlapping stigmas. Intersectional positioning creates both constraints and unexpected openings—one's unsuitability for one role might create space to claim another. Sor Juana's example teaches that political identity formation under intersectionality requires sophisticated awareness of how different systems interact, strategic flexibility, and sometimes the ability to move between positions unexpectedly.
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