Challenging dominant ways of knowing within your field as a legitimate professional contribution, especially from positions of structural marginality.
Sor Juana's theological arguments implicitly questioned ecclesiastical authority on questions of knowledge and interpretation; her scientific observations challenged prevailing Aristotelian assumptions. She practiced what Standpoint epistemology would later formalize: that positions of marginality offer distinctive epistemic advantages and create obligations to bring alternative ways of knowing into the conversation. Epistemic resistance means: questioning your field's unexamined assumptions, bringing perspectives from your outsider position as assets rather than deficits, insisting on different methodologies or evidence standards, and challenging who gets to count as a knower. For professionals from underrepresented groups, this directly addresses professional identity—you're not there merely to perform existing roles but potentially to transform how your field understands its work. The practice requires careful judgment about when resistance serves knowledge and when it becomes merely defensive. It also requires allies and institutional spaces protected enough to permit genuine questioning. Sor Juana's model shows that epistemic resistance isn't peripheral to professional identity; it's often the deepest contribution that intellectuals from marginalized positions can make.
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.