The intentional use of complexity, double meaning, and coded language to navigate multiple conflicting identity demands and institutional constraints.
Sor Juana navigated colonial Mexico's rigid hierarchies of gender, class, religion, and intellect by employing strategic ambiguity in her writing—using religious language to discuss secular ideas, embedding feminist arguments within acceptable devotional forms. This wasn't dishonesty but survival and strategic brilliance. For intersectional practitioners, strategic ambiguity acknowledges that those holding multiple marginalized identities often must code-switch and carefully negotiate presentation. It legitimizes the complex, sometimes contradictory ways people manage competing demands from different communities. Rather than viewing this as inauthentic, intersectionality recognizes it as necessary intellectual and emotional labor. Understanding strategic ambiguity helps practitioners appreciate how individuals creatively work within constraints, preserving integrity while securing safety and access to resources and platforms.
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