The pressure placed on individuals from marginalized groups to represent, speak for, or defend their entire culture or identity category.
As a woman intellectual in a male-dominated field, an indigenous-descended creole in Spanish society, and a nun navigating secular learning, Sor Juana faced constant pressure to prove not just her own worth but to defend her entire category. When marginalized individuals gain visibility, they often become forced representatives of their entire group—expected to explain, justify, and defend their people's identity and interests. This creates exhausting epistemic labor: answering not just professional questions but perpetual challenges to your right to exist in certain spaces. Across cultures, women in male fields, people of color in predominantly white institutions, and religious minorities in secular spaces experience this burden. The pressure distorts identity, forcing individuals to prioritize group representation over personal development. Sor Juana's work suggests the importance of recognizing this burden and resisting it: individuals should have the right to pursue their intellectual interests without becoming spokespeople for their entire culture. True multicultural justice means enough representation that no single person bears the weight of representing their entire group.
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