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Concept
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Defensive Knowledge and Strategic Silence

The practice of strategically managing what one reveals, knowing that visibility brings both power and danger in unequal systems.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana wrote about her own education and struggles, but also knew what to withhold. She was strategic about which battles to fight and which to avoid, writing to survive within a system that could silence her entirely. Defensive knowledge acknowledges that information is power, and that those without privilege must be cautious about exposure. This isn't about dishonesty; it's about survival. In contemporary practice, this concept helps explain why marginalized people don't always share their full perspectives—they're calculating safety. Acknowledging privilege means recognizing why this calculation is necessary at all. It means understanding that those without privilege often carry hidden knowledge, hidden pain, hidden capability. The privileged often interpret this silence as absence rather than strategy. Real acknowledgment requires creating conditions where people don't need defensive knowledge—where transparency doesn't court danger. It means those with privilege taking on the risk and visibility burden instead.

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Identity & Justice
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