The practice of questioning who holds the right to speak, teach, and define truth within hierarchical systems.
Sor Juana's confrontations with ecclesiastical authority—her famous letter challenging Bishop Fernández de Santa Cruz's criticism of her theological engagement—exemplify how role identity becomes contested terrain. In Confucian systems, authority and knowledge distribution follow strict hierarchical lines: elders teach youth, men teach women, officials guide commoners. Sor Juana didn't reject this structure; instead, she exposed its contradictions and asked why women were denied access to the intellectual tools required to fulfill their duties toward truth and understanding. This concept frames role identity as inherently involving negotiations over legitimacy. Who decides what knowledge a role demands? Who certifies competence? By examining these questions through Sor Juana's lens, practitioners can identify where their assigned roles have been artificially constrained by those threatened by their growth. The concept invites critical examination of authority itself within role systems.
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