Challenging whose ways of knowing are legitimized while others are dismissed, and reclaiming marginalized forms of understanding.
When Sor Juana defended women's right to study theology, philosophy, and science, she wasn't just claiming access to existing knowledge systems—she was questioning which forms of knowledge were considered real and valuable. Intersectional practice requires this epistemic rebellion: recognizing that different communities hold different knowledges shaped by their positions in power systems. Marginalized people often know things that dominant institutions refuse to see—about survival, resilience, systems of power, care work, cultural memory. Sor Juana teaches us to honor these ways of knowing not as supplements to 'real' knowledge but as legitimate intellectual traditions. This means elevating embodied knowledge, community knowledge, and experiential expertise alongside formal training. Epistemic rebellion isn't anti-intellectual; it's insisting that intellectual life must expand to include the full range of human understanding.
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