Building genuine alliance with those whose oppressions differ from one's own, recognizing both common threats and distinct needs within intersectional struggle.
Sor Juana addressed indigenous peoples, enslaved Africans, women, and colonized subjects in her work—creating intellectual space for those experiencing different but interconnected oppressions under colonial patriarchy. True solidarity across intersectional difference requires moving beyond abstract alliance to concrete risk-taking. Practitioners engaged with intersectionality must work with people experiencing oppressions they don't personally navigate, respecting their knowledge and leadership while remaining accountable to those most impacted. This concept challenges the tendency toward single-issue organizing or solidarity that centers the most privileged participants. It requires sustained humility: understanding how one's own intersecting identities position you with both vulnerability and power in different contexts. Genuine solidarity means making one's own oppression and privilege visible, offering resources without controlling outcomes, and amplifying voices of those most marginalized. Sor Juana's example illuminates how intellectuals can leverage their relative privilege to create broader space for marginalized thought, recognizing that liberation requires movements including those experiencing multiple simultaneous oppressions.
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