The decolonial refusal to internalize colonial knowledge hierarchies, asserting freedom not to know what colonizers demand you learn.
Sor Juana's critique of forced education systems that prioritized European theology over practical wisdom illuminates a paradoxical decolonial position: the right to refuse colonizer's knowledge. Postcolonial decolonization involves not merely adding indigenous knowledge to colonial curricula but fundamentally rejecting the epistemic frameworks that justify colonization. This means communities can choose which knowledge systems to preserve, amplify, or abandon without Western validation. The concept challenges the assumption that ignorance equals inferiority; instead, it recognizes that colonizers weaponize knowledge to legitimize dominance. Decolonial movements must assess which imposed knowledges serve liberation and which perpetuate subordination. By exercising sovereign choice over epistemology, postcolonial societies assert that no external authority determines what constitutes legitimate learning or cultural value.
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