The deliberate adoption of acceptable forms and language to protect transgressive ideas, used strategically rather than defensively.
Sor Juana was masterful at performing compliance—writing conventionally pious works, accepting ecclesiastical authority, framing her intellectual work within approved theological discourse—while embedding radical ideas within these forms. She understood that sometimes professional survival and intellectual integrity require a double consciousness: outward conformity paired with inward conviction. This is distinct from simple compromise; it is strategic deployment of acceptable performance to protect space for unacceptable thinking. Many professionals navigate this daily—the conventional email, the careful framing, the strategic citations that build intellectual credibility. The concept acknowledges that this is not inherently dishonest but rather a sophisticated practice of navigating power. However, Sor Juana's example also shows the cost: the performance eventually constrains the performer, and institutional tolerance has limits. For professionals, understanding when performance is strategic (buying intellectual freedom) versus when it is corrosive (eroding authentic identity) becomes crucial. Her life suggests that this strategy works temporarily and for specific purposes, but cannot indefinitely sustain an authentic professional identity.
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