Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Self-Defense Through Self-Knowledge

Communities protecting themselves from climate exploitation by developing deep understanding of their rights, ecosystems, and alternatives.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's famous 'Response to Sor Filotea' was an act of self-defense: she used knowledge and argument to protect her intellectual autonomy against institutional attack. She understood that self-knowledge and articulate self-advocacy are forms of resistance. Communities facing climate injustice employ similar strategy: developing deep self-knowledge about their rights, ecosystems, and alternatives becomes a form of self-defense against exploitation. A community that understands its watershed, soil systems, and indigenous history is better equipped to resist extractive projects. Movements studying corporate liability, climate law, and policy mechanisms become harder to dismiss or silence. When frontline communities articulate their own visions—not just opposing harmful projects but proposing alternatives—they defend their self-determination. This self-knowledge also protects mental health and cultural continuity under climate assault. Understanding historical resilience, traditional adaptation, and collective power helps communities survive not just materially but psychologically and spiritually. Following Sor Juana, self-defense through self-knowledge means that climate justice work includes consciousness-raising, education, and community members developing expertise about their own circumstances—becoming articulate advocates for their own futures.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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