Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Burden of Explanation and Its Refusal

The unequal labor required of marginalized people to justify their existence, knowledge, and rights, and the liberatory practice of refusing to perform this endless emotional work.

Juana
Why It Matters

Throughout her life, Sor Juana had to explain, defend, and justify her intellectual pursuits to authorities who questioned whether a woman—especially one of her racial position—should have access to learning. This emotional labor is still demanded of people with intersecting marginalized identities: explaining why their oppression is real, why their knowledge matters, why they deserve space. In intersectional practice, recognizing the burden of explanation is essential. It names why marginalized people are exhausted: not by their identities, but by constant justification to skeptics. The concept includes both understanding why this burden exists (how power operates through requiring proof of worth) and practicing refusal—knowing when explanation is a gift freely given versus when it is exploitative extraction. Some conversations merit engagement; others warrant a boundary: your existence does not require justification.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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