Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Literate Resistance: Reading as Liberation

Using literacy and critical reading as tools for children to understand systems of oppression and imagine alternative possibilities.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's voracious reading was not passive consumption but active resistance—she read to understand the world, challenge authority, and articulate her own vision of what was possible. Literacy in this sense means not just decoding words but developing critical consciousness: the ability to read texts, systems, and power structures to understand how injustice operates. For children, particularly those in oppressive contexts, literacy becomes liberation when it includes exposure to texts that name injustice, offer counter-narratives, and demonstrate that resistance is possible. This framework advocates for children's access to literature that reflects diverse experiences, presents critical perspectives on social systems, and portrays young people as agents of change rather than passive victims. Applied to children's rights, this means ensuring all children—especially those in marginalized communities—have access to books and learning that develop their capacity to recognize injustice, imagine transformation, and participate in creating more just worlds.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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