A framework where justice means recognizing that intellectual capacity and rights to knowledge are distributed equally across all gender assignments.
Sor Juana's concept of justice fundamentally challenges systems that distribute intellectual opportunities unequally based on gender assignment at birth. Her arguments for women's education and women's participation in intellectual life are arguments for justice itself. This concept defines justice not as charity or special accommodation for women, but as fundamental recognition that women possess equal intellectual capacity and equal right to pursue knowledge. It reframes what should be normal and default rather than exceptional or demanding. For those examining cisgender identity, this justice framework shifts responsibility from individuals to systems. It asks not 'How can cisgender women excel despite barriers?' but 'Why do barriers to intellectual participation exist based on gender assignment?' This reframing is psychologically significant—it moves from self-blame to systemic critique. Understanding justice this way helps individuals recognize institutional injustice as the problem requiring change, not their own failure to overcome unfair obstacles.
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