Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Knowledge as Resistance and Autonomy

The understanding that education, literacy, and intellectual development are acts of freedom and self-determination for those historically denied access to these tools.

Juana
Why It Matters

For Sor Juana, reading and writing were not merely personal pursuits—they were revolutionary acts within a colonial system that controlled what women, Indigenous people, and mixed-race individuals could know and become. Education threatened hierarchies by enabling the excluded to think critically about their exclusion. In contemporary intersectional practice, this concept acknowledges that learning—particularly learning about systems of oppression, one's own history, and alternative possibilities—is inherently liberatory. It explains why access to quality education remains a justice issue, why self-education through community and literature matters, and why gatekeepers fear the intellectual development of marginalized people. Knowledge as resistance means approaching learning not as individual achievement but as collective empowerment: when one person gains tools to understand and name their oppression, they create possibility for others. Education becomes a practice of freedom.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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