The practice of mastering dominant knowledge systems then redirecting that authority toward liberatory analysis and the restoration of suppressed knowledge.
Sor Juana became fluent in theology, Latin, philosophy, and the intellectual traditions of colonial Mexico—the master's tools—then used them to argue for women's intellectual capacity and to propose alternative readings of religious authority. She didn't reject colonial knowledge but strategically deployed it. Intersectional practice in colonial and post-colonial contexts requires this sophistication: refusing both the trap of rejecting all dominant knowledge as 'colonizer's tools' and the trap of accepting it uncritically. Instead, practitioners learn systems of power to expose their contradictions, master languages of authority to speak back, accumulate credentials to claim legitimacy then redirect it. This isn't assimilation but strategic infiltration. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that intellectual integrity doesn't require purity—that learning 'their' knowledge while maintaining your own critical framework is possible and powerful. In practice, this applies when marginalized intellectuals navigate academia, policy spaces, or institutions: the goal isn't to become them but to become fluent enough to transform from within. It validates the possibility of speaking multiple epistemological languages simultaneously.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.