The recognition that people with intersecting identities cannot be reduced to single categories, and that their hybrid cultural, linguistic, and intellectual positions are sources of insight, not confusion.
Sor Juana existed at multiple intersections: Spanish colonial authority and Mexican Indigenous heritage, female and intellectual, sacred vows and secular curiosity, writer of courtly poetry and critic of injustice. Rather than viewing her as fragmented, understanding her as necessarily hybrid reveals that intersecting identities create unique perspectives and capabilities unavailable to those occupying single categories. In intersectional practice, this concept resists pressure to choose, explain, or integrate contradictions. A person can honor multiple cultural traditions, navigate languages fluidly, hold seemingly incompatible political positions, or contain internal tensions without resolving them—not as damage, but as evidence of living across boundaries. The doctrine of necessary hybridity protects against the demand for assimilation or the reduction of complex people to single narratives. It asserts that hybrid identities are complete, coherent, and generative.
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