Recognition that those facing multiple, interlocking forms of marginalization develop nuanced strategies for resistance that address gender, class, and colonial hierarchies simultaneously.
Sor Juana lived at the intersection of patriarchal suppression, colonial subordination, and rigid class hierarchies—she was a woman, a creole (not Spanish-born), and economically dependent on the Church. Her resistance was necessarily layered and subtle, addressing multiple forms of injustice through her writing, her choice of the convent, and her intellectual claims. This concept acknowledges that civil disobedience is not monolithic; those facing intersecting oppressions must develop sophisticated, multidimensional approaches that account for power dynamics in every direction. Across traditions, this framework invites deeper analysis of how movements address compound injustices. Resistance becomes more effective when it recognizes that a single challenge to authority may simultaneously address gender, race, class, and colonial dimensions of power. Intersectional analysis strengthens civil disobedience by making it more attuned to reality.
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