The moral obligation to speak truthfully even when that truth contradicts institutional authority, requiring both courage and rhetorical skill.
Sor Juana's "Response to Sor Filotea" explicitly defended women's right to intellectual engagement and implicitly challenged Church restrictions on female authority. Contested speech is not rebellion for its own sake but truth-telling that acknowledges the cost. In her tradition, authenticity demands speaking across traditions when silence enables injustice. This differs from mere criticism; it requires understanding the language and values of your audience deeply enough to reach them. Sor Juana wrote in the Church's own theological vocabulary, making her challenge impossible to dismiss as foreign or ignorant. For those navigating authenticity across traditions, this concept affirms that genuine integration sometimes requires friction. You cannot authentically inhabit multiple traditions without sometimes finding them in conflict. True speech means articulating those conflicts clearly, taking responsibility for your position, and accepting consequences. Authenticity sometimes requires becoming a scandal.
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