Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Body as Archive of Injustice

Understanding the physical self as a historical record of systemic constraints and the site where injustice becomes legible.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's body—confined to the convent, exhausted by endless service, marked by illness—carried the literal weight of colonial patriarchy. She became aware of her body not as neutral flesh but as evidence. The concept of Body as Archive of Injustice asks: What does your body remember? What constraints have inscribed themselves into your posture, your health, your sense of space? This is not about pathologizing bodies but about reading them truthfully. In the context of Body as identity, recognizing your body as an archive means acknowledging that your self-concept is shaped by historical and ongoing injustices—gender socialization, systemic discrimination, trauma. This awareness is not paralyzing but clarifying. It allows you to distinguish between injustice that has been written on your body and the choices you are making now. For Sor Juana, this meant seeing her intellectual struggles not as personal failure but as evidence of systemic denial of women's rights to knowledge.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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