Tracing the lineage of ideas and claims across cultures to establish one's own named place in the history of thought.
Sor Juana drew on classical texts, medieval theology, contemporary science, and indigenous knowledge systems, weaving them into arguments that positioned her within a global intellectual genealogy. By naming her sources and claiming connection to great thinkers across time and culture, she asserted that her own intellectual identity belonged to this prestigious lineage. This concept explores how individuals construct intellectual identity by establishing knowledge ancestry—understanding where ideas come from, who thought them before, and how one's own contribution extends or challenges that tradition. For those from cultures whose knowledge systems have been erased, colonized, or devalued, reclaiming knowledge ancestry becomes an act of identity restoration. It allows individuals to name themselves as heirs to sophisticated traditions and to claim authority based on that inheritance. The practice of intellectual genealogy across cultures becomes a way of refusing epistemic erasure and asserting that one's identity is rooted in deep, respected, and recognized traditions of thought.
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