Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Silencing as Political Act

Understanding enforced silence—through censorship, humiliation, or institutional pressure—as a deliberate mechanism to erase particular voices and knowledge systems.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana was compelled to renounce her intellectual work and sign a confession in her own blood, effectively silenced by the very institutions that had nurtured her. This wasn't accident but deliberate suppression of a voice that threatened hierarchies of knowledge and authority. Intersectional practice requires recognizing silencing as political strategy, not inevitable outcome. Marginalized groups face systematic erasure: their histories omitted from curricula, their analyses dismissed as emotional rather than analytical, their knowledge claims denied platforms. This framework helps practitioners distinguish between voluntary restraint and coercive silence, between strategic discretion and enforced invisibility. When analyzing intersectional contexts, asking 'who is being silenced and why?' reveals power's architecture. Sor Juana's enforced silence speaks as loudly as her published work—both testify to the threat her intellect posed. In practice, this means amplifying suppressed voices, questioning whose absence from conversations matters, and recognizing that reclaiming speech is revolutionary work.

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