Intentionally navigating and revealing multiple aspects of identity to survive and advance within oppressive systems.
Sor Juana inhabited multiple, sometimes contradictory identities simultaneously: nun and intellectual, Mexican and Spanish-influenced, woman and authority figure, indigenous-descended and educated elite. She strategically emphasized different aspects of herself depending on context—performing submission when necessary while maintaining her intellectual autonomy. Intersectionality in practice requires understanding that people with overlapping marginalized identities must constantly negotiate which aspects of themselves to present, emphasize, or hide for safety and advancement. This is not inauthenticity but strategic consciousness. Sor Juana's example shows how this multiplicity can become a strength: the ability to move between worlds, understand different perspectives, and speak to diverse audiences. True intersectional practice acknowledges this navigation as legitimate survival strategy rather than pathology, and recognizes the intellectual and emotional labor it demands from those living at multiple identity intersections.
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