Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intersectional Subordination and Its Resistance

The recognition that some individuals face simultaneous constraints across multiple identity categories (gender, class, ethnicity, religion), requiring multi-directional fairness analysis.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana faced pressure not merely as a woman, nor merely as someone of Indigenous descent, nor merely as an intellectual in a theocratic state—but as all simultaneously. These constraints interacted to create unique barriers that cannot be understood through single-axis analysis. Fairness frameworks that address only one dimension of oppression will fail to serve people like Sor Juana. Contemporary fairness requires recognizing that subordination operates through multiple systems at once, each reinforcing the others. A person's access to justice depends not on single identities but on their position within overlapping hierarchies. Sor Juana's brilliance lay partly in understanding her own position clearly and choosing battles strategically. Modern justice systems that fail to account for intersectionality will inevitably perpetuate certain inequities even as they reform others. Comprehensive fairness demands seeing how oppressions compound.

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Identity & Justice
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