The concrete practice of naming influences, teachers, and intellectual debts; resisting the privilege of appearing self-made or original.
Sor Juana's work was densely footnoted and allusive—she credited her intellectual lineage openly. This practice of attribution resists one of privilege's most insidious effects: the appearance of self-creation and originality. Privileged people often benefit from invisible labor—mentoring, editing, introduction, inspiration—that goes uncredited. This concept makes that labor visible. It's a simple practice with profound implications: name your teachers, acknowledge your influences, credit the ideas that built your thinking. This practice serves multiple purposes simultaneously: it honors those who helped us, it makes visible the networks and structures that enable success, it distributes intellectual property more equitably, and it models intellectual humility. For practitioners, this becomes a discipline: never publish an idea without tracing its origins, never claim insight without naming who helped you see it.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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