The strategic compromises individuals make with oppressive systems to gain access, safety, or resources, and the personal and political costs of those bargains.
Sor Juana's life illustrates the concept of patriarchal bargains: by remaining unmarried, entering religious life, and adopting celibacy, she secured space unavailable to married women and mothers of her era. Yet these bargains came at tremendous cost—eventual silencing by church authority, the destruction of her intellectual work, and isolation. This concept, drawn from feminist theory, explores the real trades people make within oppression: conforming to respectability politics to be heard, accepting tokenism for a seat at the table, performing deference to maintain safety. In intersectional practice, recognizing patriarchal bargains means naming what you've traded away, understanding both the necessity and cost of your compromises, and questioning which bargains serve your liberation and which perpetuate the system harming you.
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