Recognizing the desire to learn, think, and create as fundamentally political when it emerges from those systems tell 'that's not for you.'
Sor Juana's burning desire to learn—stealing time, resources, and access—was not merely personal ambition but political refusal of prescribed limits. Intersectional analysis recognizes that want itself becomes radical for those systematically denied. When a girl in a culture that denies women education pursues learning, when a person from a caste told to be manual laborers insists on intellectual work, when a colonized person claims the colonizer's language for their own purposes, these desires are intrinsically political. They assert 'I am not what you've defined me as; I claim more.' This framework validates intellectual longing as legitimate political practice, not individual achievement to be moralized. Sor Juana's hunger for books, for conversation, for understanding was her resistance—she didn't need to explicitly critique power; her learning itself disputed the system's claims about her capacity and place. In practice, this means supporting the learning desires of marginalized people as part of liberation work, recognizing education access as justice, and understanding intellectual growth as collective rather than purely individual benefit. It means honoring the politics of wanting more.
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