Valuing the body as a vessel of learning and capability rather than as an object for aesthetic consumption.
Sor Juana's insistence on being recognized for her intellectual achievements rather than her appearance challenges the colonial reduction of women's bodies to ornamental status. Embodied knowledge reframes the body not as something to be looked at, but as an instrument of inquiry and understanding. This shifts physical self-concept from passive display to active agency. Her writings on theology, mathematics, and astronomy positioned her body as capable of rigorous mental work, directly opposing the era's expectation that feminine physicality should be decorative. For modern practice, this concept invites us to measure bodily worth through competence, stamina, and intellectual capacity rather than conformity to beauty standards. It asks: What can this body do and understand? rather than How does this body appear?
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