Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Identity Through Intellectual Labor

The process of constructing and asserting personal identity through intellectual work, study, and creative expression as a response to poverty's dehumanizing effects.

Juana
Why It Matters

For Sor Juana, intellectual labor was not separate from identity—it was the fundamental assertion of selfhood in a world that denied her multiple forms of agency. For people in poverty, intellectual engagement serves similar identity-constitutive functions. When economic systems deny material security and social respect, intellectual work becomes a space where identity is authored rather than assigned. This concept recognizes that poverty threatens identity by reducing people to economic status; intellectual labor restores agency and complexity. Sor Juana's voluminous writing, theological arguments, and creative expression created an inviolable self. Practically, this involves supporting educational access, recognizing intellectual interests and capabilities regardless of economic circumstance, and valuing knowledge-seeking as identity work. For individuals in poverty, the concept validates that studying philosophy, creating art, writing, or engaging in intellectual community are not luxuries but essential identity-building practices. The framework positions intellectual labor as resistance to the flattening of human identity under poverty's pressure.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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