The practice of asserting intellectual authority and creative power as a disabled person, refusing erasure through knowledge production.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz defended her right to intellectual pursuit against institutional pressure, claiming knowledge as her domain of freedom. For disabled individuals, intellectual resistance means rejecting the narrative that disability diminishes cognitive capacity or intellectual worth. This concept honors how disabled people produce knowledge, critique systems, and assert authority through writing, scholarship, and creative work. Sor Juana's model shows that marginalization can fuel intellectual rigor rather than limit it. Disability as identity becomes strengthened through deliberate knowledge-making—whether philosophical, artistic, or experiential. The disabled intellectual refuses to be objectified as a subject of study and instead becomes the knower, the analyst, the authority. This resistance reclaims narrative power and positions disability identity as a source of distinctive insight and critical perspective rather than deficit.
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