The practice of claiming knowledge authority through rigorous self-directed learning, essential for first-generation students navigating institutional skepticism.
Sor Juana exemplified how marginalized individuals—as a woman in 17th-century Mexico—could assert intellectual legitimacy by demonstrating mastery across disciplines through voracious self-education. For first-generation students, this concept validates learning pursued outside traditional pathways: library research, independent study, creative problem-solving. Sor Juana's refusal to accept imposed limits on her knowledge-seeking models how first-generation learners can build confidence in their intellectual capabilities despite lacking family precedent. Her tradition teaches that legitimacy isn't granted by institutions alone—it's earned through disciplined curiosity, synthesis of diverse sources, and the courage to ask questions others deem inappropriate. This shifts the first-generation narrative from deficit to agency: your non-traditional path becomes your intellectual strength.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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