The practice of claiming the right to think independently and pursue knowledge as a direct resistance to colonial epistemic domination and imposed intellectual hierarchies.
Sor Juana exemplified intellectual autonomy by insisting on her right to study, question, and write despite colonial and patriarchal restrictions. She understood that controlling what people think is fundamental to colonial power. In postcolonial contexts, intellectual autonomy means reclaiming the authority to define knowledge on your own terms, reject imposed frameworks, and center your own traditions and ways of knowing. This isn't merely personal freedom—it's a foundational decolonial practice that challenges the colonial legacy of treating colonized peoples as incapable of reason. By exercising rigorous thought and demanding recognition of your intellectual capacity, you dismantle the psychological architecture of colonialism and create space for authentic identity formation grounded in self-determined understanding rather than imposed categories.
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