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Concept
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Intellectual Defiance as Intersectional Resistance

The practice of claiming knowledge and voice as an act of resistance against overlapping systems of oppression.

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Why It Matters

Sor Juana's refusal to silence her intellect despite pressure from religious and patriarchal authorities models how marginalized people can assert agency through intellectual work. Her defense of women's right to study and think directly challenged the intersection of gender, class, and ecclesiastical power that sought to contain her. In intersectional practice, intellectual defiance means recognizing that pursuing knowledge, speaking truth, and demanding recognition are not neutral acts—they are political acts that resist multiple, simultaneous systems of control. This concept invites practitioners to examine how their own intellectual labor functions as resistance, and how systems of oppression attempt to regulate who gets to think, know, and be heard.

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