Understanding one's physical self as a living record of struggles for dignity, rights, and intellectual freedom against systemic oppression.
Every restriction placed on Sor Juana's body—the convent walls, the prohibition on secular study, the demand for obedience—left marks. Yet her body also became a archive of resistance: she wrote in margins, she spoke in coded language, she occupied spaces not meant for her. Her physical presence itself was an argument for her right to exist as a thinking being. This concept invites us to read our own bodies as historical documents inscribed with resistance and resilience. Scars, posture, energy levels, how we move through spaces—these are not merely biological facts but testimonies to our struggles for autonomy and recognition. Your body carries the history of your refusals and your claims to self-determination.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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