Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intersectional Identity Navigation

The complex navigation of multiple overlapping identities (poverty, gender, race, colonial status) and the strategic ways to assert dignity across all dimensions.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana lived at the intersection of multiple marginalized identities: she was poor, illegitimate, female, Indigenous-descended, and colonized within a hierarchical Spanish colonial system. Her intellectual and creative work required navigating these intersecting constraints strategically—sometimes emphasizing obedience and piety to protect her scholarly pursuits, sometimes boldly asserting her intellectual authority. This concept recognizes that people experiencing poverty rarely face only one form of marginalization; rather, poverty intersects with gender, race, disability, immigration status, sexuality, and other identity dimensions. Each intersection creates unique constraints and possibilities. Strategic identity navigation involves understanding how these dimensions interact, choosing when to emphasize or obscure different aspects of identity, building alliances across shared experiences, and recognizing how addressing one form of injustice requires addressing others. For those navigating poverty and identity, intersectional awareness transforms isolated individual struggle into recognized structural inequality and enables more effective resistance.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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