The right to self-directed thinking and knowledge-creation as a foundational act of decolonization, reclaiming the mind from colonial domination.
Sor Juana's relentless pursuit of knowledge despite institutional constraints models intellectual autonomy as a decolonial practice. She refused to accept imposed limits on what women, or colonized subjects, could know or express. In postcolonial contexts, this concept frames the reclamation of thought itself as political liberation—rejecting colonial curricula, Western-centric epistemologies, and gatekeeping of education. Decolonization requires not just political independence but cognitive freedom: the ability to ask questions, pursue learning paths that honor one's own traditions, and validate knowledge systems beyond the colonizer's framework. Sor Juana's legacy demonstrates that intellectual resistance precedes and enables all other forms of liberation.
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