Understanding how religious patriarchy controls knowledge and identity, and how secularism can enable intellectual equality across gender.
Sor Juana's central conflict was theological: the Church claimed women lacked the intellectual capacity for serious study, and her sexuality made her dangerous to male authority. These were religious justifications for gendered oppression. Her secular liberation—claiming women's right to knowledge independent of religious validation—became possible only by questioning religious authority itself. For contemporary secular identity, this framework reveals how religious doctrine often serves patriarchal control. Leaving faith can mean recognizing how gendered restrictions were presented as divine truth. Secular identity offers women, gender non-conforming, and LGBTQ+ people freedom to define themselves without religious categories of sin, purity, or divinely-ordained roles. Sor Juana's insistence on women's intellectual equality prefigures modern secular humanism's commitment to epistemic justice—the recognition that all minds deserve equal authority in truth-seeking, regardless of gender.
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