Navigating multiple, contradictory identity categories as a source of insight rather than shame within decolonial frameworks.
Sor Juana's existence—daughter of a Spanish father and indigenous or Afro-descendant mother, intellectually brilliant yet socially constrained—embodies the mestiza consciousness that Gloria Anzaldúa later theorized as a decolonial perspective. Rather than seeking pure identity or assimilating into colonial categories, mestiza consciousness holds contradictions productively, creating new ways of knowing from the borderlands. Postcolonial identity formation often involves navigating between colonizer and colonized, traditional and modern, local and global—positions Sor Juana inhabited acutely. This concept reframes hybridity not as dilution but as generative complexity. For decolonization, mestiza consciousness offers a framework where people need not choose singular loyalty but can synthesize multiple traditions into decolonial thought. Sor Juana's work shows that those positioned in contradictory spaces often possess unique critical clarity about oppressive systems.
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