Understanding justice as changing systems and relationships toward liberation, rather than retribution, as the framework Sor Juana's tradition offers intersectionality.
Sor Juana did not seek to punish the church fathers who silenced her; she sought to transform how knowledge, authority, and gender could be understood. Her arguments were not about vengeance but about expanding the possible. In intersectional justice practice, this distinction matters enormously. Punitive justice often reproduces hierarchies—the oppressed become the oppressor. Transformative justice asks: what conditions would allow all people to flourish? What relationships and systems need to change? This reframes intersectional struggle from seeking dominance to seeking liberation. It allows coalitions across difference because the goal is not to elevate one group but to remake conditions for everyone. When a community responds to harm through restoration and relationship-building rather than exclusion, they practice Sor Juana's approach: Can we understand each other differently? Can knowledge grow? Can systems change toward justice?
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