Using inquiry and intellectual challenge as a form of resistance to imposed identities and unjust frameworks.
Sor Juana's intellectual method was fundamentally interrogative—she questioned theology, authority, gender norms, and power itself. Her famous Reply to Sister Philothea is structured as an extended defense through careful questioning, demonstrating that inquiry itself can be an act of resistance. For those with adopted identities, questioning becomes a tool of liberation. Rather than accepting the framework you were given—the role, the story, the limitations—you can ask: Why was I told this? Who benefits from my accepting this identity? What am I not allowed to question? What would change if I did? These questions need not be asked aloud; the internal practice of interrogation shifts your relationship to your adopted identity. Questions destabilize certainty, creating space for choice. Sor Juana shows that the intellectual life is inherently subversive when directed toward examining what others assume to be fixed. In asking questions, you assert your right to think, judge, and ultimately determine your own identity rather than merely inhabit one assigned to you.
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