The understanding that intellectual development becomes simultaneously a personal survival tool and a form of resistance against systems designed to keep you ignorant and compliant.
For Sor Juana, learning was both an escape from assigned limitations and a way to articulate critique of those very limitations. Knowledge as survival and resistance acknowledges that education, reading, and intellectual engagement serve dual purposes for marginalized people. Learning about your own history is resistance. Understanding political economy helps you survive. Developing philosophical frameworks helps you refuse gaslighting. This is not metaphorical—ignorance keeps people subjugated, while knowledge expands what you can imagine and do. In intersectionality practice, this concept honors how multiply-marginalized people often develop fierce intellectual lives not as luxury but as necessity. It validates the time and energy devoted to reading, study groups, and self-education as radical acts. It connects personal intellectual growth directly to collective liberation, recognizing that your understanding of your own intersecting identities is simultaneously an individual and political achievement that has material consequences for your freedom.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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