Using knowledge and intellect as a protective persona to challenge oppressive systems while maintaining safety and agency.
Sor Juana adopted the intellectual mask—the learned nun, the poet-scholar—as both shield and sword against the constraints placed on women in 17th-century New Spain. Her erudition became a socially acceptable persona that allowed her to speak truth to power without being silenced. This concept examines how we construct intellectual identities not merely for acceptance, but as deliberate tools of resistance. When we wear the mask of the scholar, the expert, or the questioner, we create space for ourselves in systems that would otherwise deny it. Sor Juana's tradition teaches that masks need not be false—they can be authentic expressions of our complexity, strategically deployed to protect our capacity for growth, justice, and truth-telling within hostile environments.
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