The practice of claiming knowledge and learning as acts of self-definition during transitions, following Sor Juana's model of intellectual autonomy.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz demonstrated that intellectual engagement becomes an essential form of identity construction, particularly when facing institutional constraints. During life transitions—career changes, relocations, role shifts—the cultivation of knowledge and critical thinking serves as a stable anchor for selfhood. This concept frames learning not as escape but as active assertion of agency: studying, questioning, and developing expertise become declarations of who we are becoming. When external circumstances force identity reorganization, intellectual work provides both continuity and transformation. Sor Juana's library and her defense of women's right to knowledge illuminate how literacy, study, and creative thought stabilize identity during upheaval, offering a counterweight to external definitions imposed by circumstance, status, or expectation.
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