Periagoge
Concept
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The Injustice of Intellectual Gatekeeping

The systematic denial of education, publication, and institutional recognition to specific groups represents profound unfairness that civilizations must actively dismantle.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's greatest conflicts arose when male religious authorities denied her access to formal education, libraries, and legitimate publication channels simply because she was a woman. She recognized this as injustice: not merely personal disappointment but structural violation. When societies restrict who may learn, who may publish, who may be recognized as knowers, they create cascading unfairness. Those excluded cannot contribute their insights; those included inherit unearned authority. This pattern repeats across civilizations: excluding women from universities, enslaved people from literacy, colonized peoples from their own histories. Every civilization that evolved toward fairness eventually recognized gatekeeping as fundamentally unjust. Modern fairness requires active removal of these barriers—not charity toward excluded groups but correction of stolen opportunity. Sor Juana's legacy teaches that intellectual gatekeeping isn't an accident of tradition but requires constant, intentional work to dismantle, and that such dismantling is central to justice itself.

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