The calculated performance of not-knowing as a protection and privilege, allowing the fool to operate freely while others remain trapped in pride and pretense.
Nasreddin's apparent ignorance is sometimes genuine, sometimes performed, and audiences cannot always distinguish—this ambiguity is his power. By seeming foolish, he gains freedom to speak truths that authorities dare not voice. Strategic ignorance is a privilege available primarily to those already marginalized—the fool, the servant, the woman, the foreigner—who can use their excluded status as cover. Comedy traditions leverage this across cultures: servants out-witting masters in commedia dell'arte, women's humor that feigns compliance while subverting power, trickster tales where the weak use apparent stupidity as survival. The examined joyful life recognizes strategic ignorance as survival technique and wisdom practice. Dominant groups cannot easily perform ignorance because power requires the appearance of knowledge and control. But those without power can weaponize seeming foolishness. Comedy traditions grant this strategy legitimacy and visibility. By honoring strategic ignorance, these traditions validate the intelligence of marginalized people and reveal how dominant groups are trapped by their need to appear wise.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.