How creating written records, publishing arguments, and documenting injustices creates institutional accountability and preserves truth.
Sor Juana wrote extensively—letters, poetry, philosophical treatises, plays—partly to create a record of her thinking and partly to defend herself against institutional attacks. Her written work became evidence of her capabilities and the injustice of her treatment. In organizational ethics, documentation serves similar functions: written policies create transparency, documented decisions enable accountability, and recorded communications prevent gaslighting. Organizations with strong writing cultures also have stronger ethics because claims require justification, decisions require explanation, and misconduct leaves traces. Sor Juana understood that oral cultures favor those in power; writing democratizes authority by creating permanent records accessible to others. Modern ethical organizations encourage documentation at all levels—employees recording decisions, meetings generating minutes, policies remaining accessible, grievances creating files. This doesn't mean bureaucratic excess; it means sufficient documentation that truth can be established later if needed, that power cannot simply deny or rewrite history. Sor Juana's letters and published works ensured her voice survived institutional suppression. Organizational culture that values writing also values accountability.
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