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Concept
1 min read

Knowledge as Subversive Act

Learning and expertise as inherently political when pursued by those whom systems prefer to keep ignorant or dependent.

Juana
Why It Matters

For Sor Juana, intellectual work wasn't neutral scholarship; it was resistance. Knowledge acquired by women, enslaved peoples, and colonized populations threatens power structures built on their ignorance. This concept connects professional development to liberation. It asks: whose knowledge counts as legitimate? Who is expected to remain ignorant? Who faces barriers specifically designed to prevent expertise? Modern professionals can examine whether their field, role, or knowledge-production participates in systems that benefit from others' exclusion. The concept also reframes professional identity for those from marginalized backgrounds: your expertise isn't just career advancement; it's part of collective liberation. This doesn't mean all professional work is revolutionary, but it clarifies that for some, the act of becoming knowledgeable, credentialed, and authoritative carries inherent political significance beyond individual achievement.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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