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Concept
1 min read

Cultural Resistance Through Creative Expression

Using art, literature, music, and intellectual work as means of asserting identity, challenging power structures, and transmitting heritage.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's poetry, plays, and theological works constituted resistance—claiming intellectual and creative authority in a system designed to deny it to her. Every published page asserted her right to exist as a thinking being. Creative expression serves similar functions in ethnic heritage: art and music preserve identity and transmit knowledge even under repression. During colonization and slavery, communities maintained heritage through songs, stories, visual arts, and ritual practices that dominant powers could not fully control. Creative resistance allows expression when direct political action is impossible. Contemporary ethnic identity work continues this tradition—visual artists reclaim narratives, musicians preserve languages, writers document histories, performers maintain ritual knowledge. This concept recognizes that heritage transmission happens through creativity, that artistic expression is not decoration but essential survival practice. Making art is making identity real and visible.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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Understand Ethnic identity and heritage More Clearly
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