Periagoge
Concept
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Women's Intellectual Leadership in Decolonization

Centering women's minds, voices, and authority as essential—not supplementary—to decolonial thought and liberation movements.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's entire life was an assertion that women's intellectual contribution is non-negotiable to any civilization's flourishing. Colonialism and patriarchy worked together to silence women, particularly women of color, as thinkers and authorities. Decolonization that ignores gender liberation is incomplete decolonization. This concept elevates women's intellectual leadership—not as helping hands to male-led movements, but as architects of decolonial futures. Women's distinctive experiences of multiple oppressions (gender, race, class, colonial status) produce unique epistemological insights. Women's ways of knowing—relational, embodied, holistic—offer alternatives to the extractive, dominating rationality of colonialism itself. Sor Juana's precedent calls postcolonial communities to ensure women's voices shape decolonial theory and practice, that women educators and thinkers are resourced and centered, and that liberation frameworks explicitly address gender justice as foundational to all freedom.

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Identity & Justice
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