The isolation experienced by those whose identity positions them at unique intersections, lacking community mirrors and facing singular pressures no single-axis movement can address.
Sor Juana was singular: an intellectually brilliant woman in a male-dominated church, a creole in a colonial hierarchy, a nun claiming authority over her own thought, a person whose multiple marginalizations created isolation even within communities that shared one axis of her oppression. Intersectionality names this experience of being at angles to existing movements and communities. Someone might find gender-based solidarity but encounter racism, or class-based organizing but encounter sexism. This framework acknowledges the loneliness of intersectional positions: you cannot fully belong anywhere because your full self doesn't fit any single category. Yet this solitude also generates unique clarity. Sor Juana's isolation forced her to develop independent intellectual frameworks rather than simply adopt existing ones. In practice, recognizing intersectional solitude means building different kinds of community—not demanding others share all your identities but finding others who understand the specific pressures of your particular confluence. It means validating that belonging may never be total, and that generating your own knowledge may be necessary.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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