Acknowledgment that speaking truth to power demands sacrifice, and that civil disobedience should be practiced with eyes open to personal cost and the possibility of silencing.
Sor Juana paid dearly for her intellectual courage: the Bishop's censure, the loss of her library, ultimately her forced recantation and silence before her early death. Her life demonstrates that civil disobedience rooted in truth-telling is not a romantic enterprise but a costly commitment. This framework resists sanitized narratives of resistance that minimize suffering; it honors those who chose integrity knowing it would diminish their voice. Understanding the cost is crucial for ethical civil disobedience—it prevents naive activism and builds movements grounded in sober commitment rather than naive idealism. Across traditions, this concept appears in the testimonies of whistleblowers, dissidents, and prophetic voices who sacrificed security for truth. It asks modern practitioners: Am I willing to pay this price? What am I willing to lose? This question separates performative activism from genuine moral commitment.
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