The claim to independent thought and creative authority as a fundamental act of gender non-conformity, modeled on Sor Juana's refusal of prescribed feminine roles.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz asserted her right to intellectual life despite colonial Mexico's strict gender expectations, claiming authority through knowledge itself. This concept frames intellectual autonomy not as a neutral pursuit but as an explicit resistance to gendered constraints on who may think, create, and speak publicly. Across cultures, gender non-conforming individuals use intellectual engagement—scholarship, art, philosophy, science—to legitimize identities that defy social prescription. Sor Juana's model shows how claiming the life of the mind becomes both personal liberation and political statement, establishing intellectual work as a space where gender can be reimagined beyond binary assignment.
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