Systematic examination of how colonization fused with patriarchy to restrict women's intellectual access, proposing gendered decolonization as essential to liberation.
Sor Juana's entire intellectual project challenged the patriarchal gatekeeping that prohibited women from theological and philosophical study. She exposed how colonial authority and male authority reinforced each other—that decolonization incomplete without addressing gender cannot be authentic liberation. This concept positions feminist critique as integral to postcolonial work, not secondary. Colonized communities often reinforce patriarchal structures as part of cultural reclamation, but this reproduces oppression rather than transcending it. Genuine decolonization must simultaneously challenge colonial extraction and patriarchal control, recognize that women of color face compounded epistemic injustice, and insist that women's intellectual authority is essential. This requires both critiquing how patriarchy operates within colonialism and integrating women's knowledge, leadership, and vision into decolonial futures.
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