How poor and marginalized people access, transform, and transmit cultural knowledge despite economic exclusion from elite institutions.
Sor Juana accessed the intellectual traditions of Catholicism, classical scholarship, and philosophical thought—fields typically available only to wealthy, educated men—through her own curiosity, mentorship, and institutional position. She inherited and transformed this knowledge, making it her own and bequeathing it transformed to future generations. This concept recognizes that poverty restricts but does not eliminate cultural transmission and intellectual inheritance. Poor communities maintain knowledge systems—practical skills, spiritual traditions, collective memory, folk wisdom—often devalued by elite institutions. Sor Juana exemplifies how marginalized individuals can seize available knowledge sources (libraries, mentors, texts), engage them rigorously, and create new work. Today, this applies to intergenerational knowledge-sharing in poor communities, underfunded schools teaching canonical texts, and cultural preservation despite economic marginalization. The framework argues for recognizing intellectual inheritance as a justice resource and suggesting that access to canonical knowledge—philosophy, history, science—enriches poor communities and enables identity development beyond survival.
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