The understanding that learning itself can be a form of resistance when you occupy a position society deems unfit for educated people.
For Sor Juana, pursuing knowledge was transgressive—women weren't supposed to study theology or philosophy. Her intellectual ambition violated gender norms and challenged power structures. For first-generation students, this concept reframes education from obligation into radical act. When your family is told you won't succeed, when your community hasn't produced doctors or academics, when educational institutions subtly signal you don't belong—your commitment to learning becomes transgressive. Sor Juana's tradition teaches that this transgression carries weight and dignity. You're not just acquiring credentials; you're disrupting narratives about who gets to think, question, and contribute to human knowledge. This reframing transforms the isolation many first-generation students feel into purposefulness: your presence in educational spaces challenges systems that wanted to keep you out. Knowledge becomes not consumption but resistance.
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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