The creation and cultivation of intellectual spaces where marginalized people can develop identity, exercise agency, and claim freedom despite constrained circumstances.
Sor Juana's accumulation of a personal library of thousands of volumes represented both intellectual resource and sanctuary—a space where she could think freely, learn independently, and construct an identity beyond institutional control. The library as sanctuary recognizes that for people with limited material resources and constrained autonomy, cultivated intellectual spaces become essential to psychological, spiritual, and intellectual survival. These sanctuaries need not be physical libraries; they can be study groups, artistic spaces, reading circles, or digital communities where marginalized people gather to learn and think together. Within poverty contexts, such spaces offer resistance to the constant demands that poor people focus only on immediate survival. They provide what Sor Juana called respite from the noise and fragmentation of restricted life. Creating sanctuaries—whether libraries, schools, artistic collectives, or knowledge-sharing communities—affirms that intellectual development and sustained reflection are human rights, not luxuries. Sor Juana's library, small as it was by elite standards, demonstrates that the cultivation of intellectual space is an act of self-preservation and identity-building for those experiencing marginalization and poverty.
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