The deliberate use of knowledge creation and intellectual work as an act of resistance against systems of exclusion and oppression.
Sor Juana's life exemplified how intellectual engagement itself becomes a form of resistance for those marginalized by gender, class, and colonial hierarchies. She asserted her right to study, write, and think despite institutional barriers designed to silence her. In intersectionality practice, this concept recognizes that marginalized individuals often face compound barriers to education and knowledge production. Intellectual defiance means claiming space for one's own thinking, questioning dominant narratives, and refusing the intellectual erasure that systems impose. It's not merely about individual achievement but about recognizing how knowledge work by the multiply marginalized challenges and disrupts power structures. This practice transforms the act of learning itself into political resistance.
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