Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Knowledge as Liberation Practice

The understanding that education and intellectual development are pathways to freedom, not merely economic advantage or status.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana pursued knowledge with an intensity that transcended practical necessity. For her, learning was liberation—an expansion of the self into larger worlds of meaning and understanding. This concept connects to traditions from Freire's pedagogy of liberation to Buddhist paths of enlightenment: knowledge as emancipation. In contexts of oppression, intellectual development becomes a form of freedom that cannot be fully constrained. Sor Juana's vast reading, her philosophical investigations, her poetic expression created an internal realm of autonomy even as external constraints limited her. Fairness, from this perspective, requires ensuring that all people have access to the tools of intellectual freedom. When knowledge is rationed by gender, race, class, or caste, entire populations are kept in a diminished state, unable to understand their own condition or imagine alternatives. Sor Juana's life testifies that knowledge itself is an essential good, not merely instrumental. A fair society invests in making learning widely available, not because it produces economically useful workers, but because it honors the human capacity for understanding as intrinsically valuable and liberating.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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