The assertion that one's thoughts, words, and ideas belong to oneself, not to gendered institutions or male gatekeepers.
Sor Juana's conflict with her confessor over control of her writing and thought—demanding that her intellectual work not be appropriated or silenced by male religious authority—establishes a principle of intellectual self-ownership. This concept applies to cisgender identity by recognizing that authenticity requires ownership of one's own narrative and knowledge production. Many cisgender individuals, particularly women, have been socialized to defer intellectual authority to others or to doubt their own understanding. Sor Juana's insistence on her right to think, publish, and defend her ideas models reclaiming that authority. For those examining cisgender identity, this means questioning internalized messages that one's thoughts should be filtered through others' approval or shaped by patriarchal institutions. It means asserting that one's understanding of one's own gendered experience, one's body, one's choices—all of this is intellectual property that belongs to oneself. This concept reframes identity work as a process of reclaiming authority over one's own knowledge and narrative.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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