Using the body's capacity to write, speak, and create as a form of political and personal resistance against systems that attempt to control or diminish physical selfhood.
Sor Juana's poetry and prose were acts of embodied resistance—her physical hands writing, her voice speaking through text, claiming space in a world that sought to silence her. Writing became a way of inhabiting her body intentionally and powerfully. This concept applies to modern body image struggles: your body has the capacity to express, resist, and create meaning. Whether through writing, art, movement, or speech, the body can be reclaimed as an agent of resistance against internalized shame or external oppression. Sor Juana's tradition shows that physical self-concept transforms when you stop accepting imposed definitions and instead use your embodied capacities to author your own identity and narrative.
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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