Building and claiming the right to speak as an expert from positions of multiple marginalization, without requiring permission from dominant institutions.
Sor Juana claimed authority as a theologian, philosopher, and scientist despite her gender, race, and colonial status making her invisible to European intellectual establishments. Epistemic authority across difference addresses how marginalized people are systematically denied credibility while dominant voices face minimal scrutiny. In intersectional practice, this concept helps practitioners recognize their own knowledge as legitimate—whether from lived experience, community wisdom, or self-directed study—without waiting for institutional validation. It examines how credentials are distributed unequally across identity lines and how alternative knowledge systems are delegitimized. This framework supports building platforms, publications, and circles where marginalized scholars claim authority collectively, refusing the scarcity model that requires proving worthiness individually.
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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