The practice of using education and intellectual engagement as an act of resistance against systems that deny knowledge to the poor and powerless.
Sor Juana's dedication to learning—gathering books, writing brilliantly, defending her intellectual work—was an act of defiance against structures designed to keep her subordinate. This concept positions education not as a pathway to assimilation but as sacred resistance. For people in poverty, pursuing knowledge becomes a declaration: I refuse to be limited by your expectations, I claim my capacity to think and create. Sor Juana's tradition shows that learning can be simultaneously spiritual, political, and transformative. The act of studying, questioning, and creating becomes holy work that asserts human dignity and challenges systems of oppression. In examining poverty and identity, sacred defiance through learning means refusing to be silenced, taking up intellectual space, and insisting on the right to grow.
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