Using informal, relational communication to create conditions where marginalized thinkers can claim authority and challenge power directly.
Sor Juana's letters—especially her Response to Sor Filotea—use the intimate form of correspondence to accomplish what formal, institutional channels denied her: the ability to speak back to power, to argue theology, and to define her own intellectual worth. The letter form allowed her to be personal and rigorous simultaneously, to speak to one person while addressing a larger public. In intersectionality practice, this concept honors how marginalized communities often build knowledge and resistance through relational, informal channels—conversations, letters, stories, social media, community meetings—rather than waiting for institutional legitimacy. These forms allow for the integration of emotion and analysis, relationship and argument, that institutional forms often prohibit. By recognizing informal intellectual spaces as valid sites of knowledge production, intersectionality values the ways marginalized people actually think and organize, rather than demanding they conform to dominant-group forms of knowledge-sharing.
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