Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Identity as a Site of Rights and Conflict

The recognition that oppressive systems attack identity itself—controlling who people are allowed to be—making identity restoration a reparations imperative.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana inhabited a complex identity: a woman in a male-dominated intellectual world, a person of mixed race in a racialized colonial hierarchy, a nun challenging ecclesiastical authority, an intellectual in a society that feared her knowledge. Colonial, patriarchal, and religious systems attempted to control and restrict who she could be. She claimed her right to self-definition. In reparations philosophy, identity reparations acknowledge that oppression doesn't only take material goods—it takes selfhood itself. Systems deny people the right to their own names, languages, spiritual practices, family structures, and self-understanding. Indigenous peoples are forced to abandon languages; enslaved people are stripped of family names; colonized peoples are taught to despise their own cultures. Reparations must therefore include identity restoration: supporting language reclamation, funding cultural practices, validating non-dominant identity expressions, and creating space for people to recover and assert who they are.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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Explored In These Journeys
Journey
The Examined Path Through Reparations — the philosophical case
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