Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Epistemic Injustice and Knowledge Legitimacy

The systematic denial of credibility to certain people's knowledge based on their social identity, and how to recognize and resist it.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana confronted epistemic injustice directly—her knowledge was questioned not because of flawed reasoning but because she was a woman and a colonial subject. Epistemic injustice occurs when intersecting identities cause society to discount someone's testimony, expertise, or intellectual contributions. In intersectional practice, recognizing epistemic injustice means examining whose knowledge gets centered, funded, published, and celebrated. It requires asking: whose perspectives are treated as universal truth? Whose are treated as merely personal experience? By naming this injustice, practitioners can deliberately amplify marginalized knowledge systems, create peer validation structures outside traditional hierarchies, and build epistemic communities that honor diverse ways of knowing. This restores legitimacy to knowledge that systems have systematically devalued.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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