The convent provided Sor Juana economic security and intellectual freedom unavailable to women of her mixed-race class position in colonial society, revealing institutional alternatives to class constraint.
Sor Juana chose monastic life partly as a deliberate class strategy—the convent offered autonomy, access to libraries, and protection from marriage arrangements that would have bound her to a predetermined social role. For individuals in precarious class positions, institutions can provide alternative pathways that bypass traditional hierarchies. Understanding the convent as a strategic choice rather than merely a spiritual calling reveals how marginalized people identify and utilize existing structures to advance their position and consciousness. Class consciousness includes recognizing which institutions might offer protection, resources, or freedom despite their primary stated purposes. Sor Juana's choice illuminates how class identity intersects with gender, race, and religious possibility—she navigated colonial hierarchies by identifying a space where her intellect could flourish and her mixed-race identity, though never erased, became secondary to her spiritual and intellectual authority within her community.
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