Using education and intellectual pursuit as spiritual and political resistance against systems designed to limit agency and knowledge access.
Sor Juana weaponized learning itself as a form of resistance, transforming the convent into a space of forbidden knowledge and philosophical transgression. The theology of resistance through learning posits that intellectual growth is an act of liberation and dignity-claiming in contexts where colonialism deliberately restricts access to education. For postcolonial communities, this framework reframes education not merely as skill-acquisition but as a sacred reclamation of humanity and self-definition. Learning becomes an assertion that the colonized mind is capable, worthy, and legitimately powerful. This concept challenges the colonial narrative that portrayed colonized peoples as intellectually inferior or dependent. Decolonization demands creating spaces—libraries, universities, oral traditions, digital platforms—where marginalized voices can study, question, and author their own narratives. Sor Juana's example shows that even within oppressive structures, intellectual defiance is possible and transformative, inspiring postcolonial societies to invest in education as both personal liberation and collective decolonization.
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