The power to define oneself through intellectual contribution rather than social assignment, challenging how names and identities are imposed versus self-determined.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz claimed intellectual authority in a world that assigned women only domestic identities. She demonstrates that naming oneself through scholarship, writing, and thought is a fundamental act of resistance and freedom. In multicultural contexts, this concept recognizes that individuals possess the right to construct identities based on their intellectual capacity and contributions, not inherited categories or external labels. When people are permitted to define themselves through knowledge work rather than conforming to predetermined cultural roles, they reclaim agency over their identity narrative. This applies to anyone whose name carries expectations that contradict their intellectual aspirations—immigrants navigating new cultural hierarchies, women in male-dominated fields, or marginalized communities asserting expertise. The right to intellectual self-naming becomes a pathway toward justice and authentic identity across cultural boundaries.
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