Using formal rebuttal and argumentation to challenge official narratives and assert the right to self-interpretation and vindication.
Sor Juana's Respuesta a Sor Filotea stands as one of literature's great acts of civil disobedience—a response to censure that became a defense of intellectual freedom, women's education, and the right to interpret one's own life and work. Rather than recant or apologize genuinely, she reframed the accusation itself: she had not transgressed; the system that denied women learning was transgressing. This concept identifies the defense, the counter-argument, and the public statement of refusal as forms of civil disobedience. Across traditions, from legal defenses at trials (Socrates, modern activists) to published manifestos and autobiographies, the dissenter's own account becomes an act of resistance—asserting the right to narrate oneself rather than be narrated by power. The defense claims authority over meaning and interpretation. It is civil disobedience through rhetoric and testimony, through the insistence that the accused person's voice and version of events have standing. This illuminates how civil disobedience extends into cultural and epistemic domains: who gets to tell the truth about what happened?
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