Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Ancestral Knowing as Intellectual Authority

Reclaiming indigenous, ancestral, or non-Western knowledge systems as legitimate intellectual sources for understanding identity and naming practices.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana drew on Nahuatl cosmology, indigenous medicine, and pre-Columbian knowledge traditions alongside European philosophy and theology, treating all as worthy of serious engagement. This practice legitimized ancestral knowing in spaces—the Spanish court, the Church—that typically dismissed such knowledge as superstition or error. Reclaiming ancestral knowledge as intellectual authority becomes critical for people across cultures recovering from colonialism, cultural suppression, or assimilation pressure. If your ancestors' ways of knowing were systematically devalued, reclaiming them requires courage: asserting that your grandmother's healing practices, your culture's philosophical frameworks, or your community's historical narratives constitute legitimate knowledge. This directly impacts identity: naming practices, understanding selfhood, and articulating identity often depend on knowledge systems. Sor Juana's example shows that bringing ancestral knowledge into dialogue with dominant intellectual traditions need not mean abandoning either; instead, it means insisting on the right to draw from multiple sources. For anyone reconstructing identity across cultures, this concept empowers the integration of inherited wisdom as authentic intellectual authority.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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Understand Name and identity across cultures More Clearly
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