The conscious recovery and transmission of wisdom from ancestors and predecessors who resisted colonialism, creating genealogies of decolonial thought.
Sor Juana's work has become a lineage for postcolonial thinkers—a connection across centuries to intellectual resistance. Building intellectual lineages of resistance is a decolonial practice that recovers the hidden genealogies of colonized peoples' thought. Rather than accepting the colonial narrative that history begins with conquest, or that legitimate intellectual traditions descend from Europe, this practice traces alternative lineages: the indigenous philosophers before contact, the enslaved Africans who theorized freedom, the colonial women who wrote their own stories. In postcolonial contexts, identifying and teaching these lineages provides psychological and spiritual grounding. Young people discover they come from a tradition of thinking, not merely suffering. These lineages offer strategies, conceptual tools, and inspiration for contemporary decolonization. By claiming intellectual ancestors, postcolonial communities assert continuous agency and intellectual authority across time.
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