Using intellectual argument and self-assertion to resist narratives that reduce one's personhood through illness or limitation.
Sor Juana's "Response to Sor Filotea" exemplifies passionate self-defense against those who would constrain her intellectual ambitions. Chronically ill individuals face constant pressure to accept diminished expectations, medical authority without question, and social narratives that position them as burdens or inspirational objects. This concept provides a framework for intellectual resistance: claiming the right to argue back, to assert one's own understanding of one's condition, and to refuse scripts written by others. Like Sor Juana defending her right to study theology against ecclesiastical authority, the chronically ill can deploy argument, evidence, and articulation to contest limiting narratives. This isn't denial of illness but refusal to allow illness to become the totality of identity. It positions the individual as active interpreter of their own experience rather than passive recipient of expert judgment, reclaiming agency through intellectual engagement with one's own story.
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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