Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Archive of Silenced Names and Histories

The systematic recovery and centering of names, stories, and identities erased from dominant historical records and intellectual traditions.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana nearly disappeared from history—her works were suppressed, her influence minimized, her intellectual contributions attributed to others or forgotten. She represents countless individuals whose names were silenced, whose identities were erased, whose contributions were stolen or obscured by dominant groups. In multicultural contexts, entire communities lack representation in archives, curricula, and cultural memory. Women's intellectual work is attributed to men; contributions from Global South are claimed by Western institutions; indigenous knowledge is appropriated and decontextualized; immigrant communities' histories are omitted. The archive of silenced names is vast. Active recovery work—researching hidden histories, centering marginalized voices, correcting attribution, creating new archives—becomes essential identity work. This matters because names that are recorded, remembered, and celebrated are recognized as legitimate; silenced names become ghosts without full humanity or historical weight. By recovering Sor Juana's work, we practice the political act of restoring names and claiming space in history. For people across cultures, this archival work is resistance—ensuring that future generations know their ancestors' names and contributions mattered.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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