Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Self-Education as Liberation and Resistance

The practice of acquiring knowledge independently as both personal freedom and collective resistance against gatekeeping institutions.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana educated herself voraciously, reading everything she could access despite lacking formal institutional education as a woman. Her self-directed learning was simultaneously an exercise of freedom and an act of resistance against a system designed to keep women ignorant. This concept recognizes that libertarian justice includes the right and capacity to educate oneself, free from institutional gatekeeping. When institutions monopolize education and restrict access based on identity, wealth, or status, they are expropriating people's right to develop their own minds. Self-education represents a form of property protection: by developing your own knowledge and skills independently, you preserve your intellectual autonomy and refuse dependence on credentialing systems that may exploit you. Sor Juana's example demonstrates that in contexts of systemic exclusion, self-directed learning becomes a crucial tool for freedom. Her vast knowledge, acquired through her own determination, gave her a power that institutional authorities could neither grant nor revoke. In libertarian justice, supporting structures for self-education—libraries, information access, intellectual communities—protects individual freedom and prevents the intellectual monopolies that enable oppression.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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