Understanding that education and intellectual capacity inherently threaten hierarchies of power, which is why they are regulated and policed across gender lines.
Sor Juana's persecution was not accidental but structural: her knowledge made her dangerous to the very institutions that claimed to value truth. The Church could tolerate a learned woman only as long as she remained subordinate; her actual exercise of intellectual authority threatened patriarchal order. This reveals a crucial insight: knowledge is never politically neutral. Societies restrict who gets to know and speak because knowledge grants power. Applied to masculinity, this means recognizing that men's traditional access to education and intellectual authority has been part of a system of domination. Conversely, when men begin to question dominant masculinity and seek knowledge about gender, psychology, justice, and themselves, they become dangerous to systems invested in their conformity. This danger is not metaphorical but real: men who develop consciousness about constructed masculinity often face isolation, mockery, and institutional pressure. Understanding knowledge as inherently linked to freedom and danger helps men make conscious choices about what they seek to understand and why.
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