Claiming authority by tracing genealogies of women thinkers and creators, establishing precedent for intellectual gender non-conformity.
Sor Juana explicitly invoked and defended women philosophers, saints, and scholars—creating an intellectual genealogy that countered the erasure of female authority. This practice of lineage-building becomes crucial for gender non-conforming individuals who must counteract the social narrative that their existence is unprecedented and illegitimate. By identifying historical figures who resisted gendered constraints on knowledge and expression, contemporary gender non-conforming people establish that their choices have precedent and necessity. Sor Juana's method demonstrates how research and scholarship become acts of identity validation: proving that women—and by extension, gender-variant people—have always claimed intellectual life, creative authority, and non-normative identities. This practice crosses cultures, appearing in Black feminist genealogies, queer historiography, and postcolonial intellectual movements that reclaim erased ancestors.
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