Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Genealogy of Your Own Oppression

The practice of tracing how multiple systems of power (gender, race, class, colonialism, religion) intersect in your own life history and family, building consciousness of structural patterns.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana was illegitimate, had Indigenous ancestry in a Spanish colonial hierarchy, was female in a patriarchal religious order, and was an intellectual in institutions designed to constrain women's thought. Each system had a history; together they created her specific position. She didn't just experience oppression; she traced its sources. Building this genealogy—understanding not just that you're oppressed but how, by which systems, and with what history—is foundational to intersectional consciousness. You examine your family: What messages about gender, race, class, sexuality, and belonging did you inherit? You examine your institutions: What rules and hierarchies benefit some while constraining others? You examine the larger history: What colonialisms, enslavements, and exclusions created the world you inhabit? This genealogical work is not blame—it's clarity. It moves you from self-blame (something is wrong with me) to structural analysis (these systems constrain people like me). This clarity makes resistance possible because you know what you're resisting. It also builds compassion for others navigating similar genealogies.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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