Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intellectual Lineage Beyond Blood: Claiming Ancestries

Building chosen intellectual lineages with those—living and dead—who illuminate your path, across boundaries of family, geography, and time.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana didn't have female precursors in her immediate context, yet she claimed intellectual ancestry through her reading: connecting to women philosophers, theologians, and thinkers she discovered through books. This practice of claiming chosen intellectual lineage is vital in intersectional work. It means identifying the thinkers, activists, artists, and ancestors whose work speaks to your questions and struggles. For many people marginalized in conventional institutions, these lineages won't be offered by schools or universities; they must be actively sought. LGBTQ+ people find lineage in queer elders and historical figures. Immigrant communities connect to diasporic intellectuals. Black people discover pan-African thinkers. Indigenous people reclaim stolen knowledge systems. Sor Juana teaches that we can choose our intellectual families, that lineage is constructed through deep study and solidarity rather than given by biology or institution. Building these connections—reading, writing, organizing with your chosen ancestors—sustains intersectional movements across time and creates continuity of resistant thought.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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