The explicit assertion and justification of one's own wants and attractions as legitimate, refusing shame and demanding recognition as just.
Sor Juana's "Response to Sor Philotea" defends her intellectual desire—her hunger to know, to study, to engage with ideas. She articulates her needs without apology, positioning them as natural and worthy of respect. For queer individuals, desire has historically been pathologized, criminalized, and erased. The defense of one's own desire—sexual, romantic, intellectual, creative—becomes a foundational political act. This is not hedonism but an insistence on the legitimacy of queer wants in a system designed to delegitimize them. Coming to understand one's own desires as valid, communicating them clearly, and refusing to internalize shame requires sustained philosophical work. This concept validates the political importance of simply wanting what one wants and demanding space for that wanting. Sor Juana's legacy teaches that defending desire is a form of justice work, an assertion of personhood in the face of systems that profit from queer self-denial.
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