The practice of claiming intellectual authority and creative work as a form of resistance against systems that deny certain identities the right to think.
Sor Juana's refusal to be silenced despite institutional pressure demonstrates that intellectual labor—writing, analysis, questioning—becomes a political act when performed by those marginalized by gender, race, or class. In intersectional practice, this means recognizing that the thinking and knowledge-creation of those at multiple margins is not merely academic but survival-oriented and transformative. When a Black woman philosopher publishes, when an Indigenous scholar reclaims historical narratives, when a queer immigrant theorizes identity, these acts challenge structural exclusion. Sor Juana's legacy teaches that defending one's right to intellectual work is inseparable from defending one's humanity and dignity within systems designed to constrain both.
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