The obligation to use reason and knowledge as tools of resistance against unjust authority, grounded in Sor Juana's model of claiming intellectual space as political act.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz transformed the convent into a space of radical intellectual freedom, asserting that the pursuit of knowledge itself was an act of defiance against patriarchal and ecclesiastical control. Her model of intellectual defiance suggests that civil disobedience need not always be public or confrontational—it can be the quiet insistence on thinking, writing, and knowing on one's own terms. This concept challenges the assumption that resistance requires dramatic action, offering instead a framework where maintaining intellectual integrity becomes a form of non-compliance. For modern practitioners of civil disobedience across traditions, this illuminates how educational access, scholarship, and the refusal to accept imposed ignorance become acts of justice. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that authority fears the thinking subject more than the rebel, making intellectual autonomy a foundational principle of sustainable resistance.
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