Using rigorous inquiry and critical questioning to expose injustice and advance rights, treating intellectual work as inherently political and liberatory.
Sor Juana's fundamental method was questioning: she challenged ecclesiastical authority, examined theological assumptions, probed the foundations of received wisdom. Her questioning was never abstract; it was always aimed at understanding systems of power and advancing human dignity and justice. She questioned why women were denied education, why indigenous knowledge was dismissed, why women's speech was policed. In intersectional practice, justice-centered questioning becomes a systematic approach to intellectual work. It means refusing the false neutrality that separates knowledge-making from justice concerns. Sor Juana's legacy demonstrates that the most rigorous, powerful thinking emerges when intellectuals are rooted in commitment to justice across intersecting oppressive systems. This approach transforms questioning from a detached academic exercise into a practice of liberation—making visible what oppressive systems want hidden, exposing contradictions, and creating space for alternative possibilities.
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