Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Embodied Argument: The Body as Evidence

Treating the lived, physical body as legitimate evidence and argument in intellectual and ethical discourse about justice and rights.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's presence itself was an argument: a woman's body standing in spaces where women's intellectual work was deemed impossible, impious, or inappropriate. Her lived existence contradicted the claims made about female capacity and proper behavior. In her writings, she appeals not only to logic but to the testimony of her own body's capabilities. This concept reframes body as identity in terms of evidence: what does your body know, do, and demonstrate that refutes false claims about identity and capacity? Personal bodily testimony—what you can actually do, feel, and sustain—carries epistemic weight. When we understand body as identity, we recognize that our physical lives are arguments against limiting narratives. A disabled body that persists in intellectual work, a racialized body that claims space in exclusive institutions, a female body that speaks authoritatively—these are not merely personal achievements but challenges to false universal claims. Embodied argument means recognizing that our particular, physical, lived experience is a form of knowledge and evidence that can contest power and injustice. The body testifies to what is possible.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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