Using writing and direct address to challenge unjust power structures and assert your right to exist, think, and speak in your own voice.
Sor Juana's letters and Reply confronted bishops, viceroys, and social norms directly—not with deference but with reasoned authority. Epistolary justice means communicating your truth, your grievance, your claim directly to those who hold power over narratives about you. This practice is especially vital for adopted identities because others may have told your story before you could speak. Justice here is not legal punishment but the act of truth-telling: asserting that your account, your perspective, your understanding of your own life matters and deserves to be heard. Whether through letters, testimony, creative work, or direct conversation, epistolary justice is an active resistance to being defined by others' narratives. It says: I am here, I have something to say, and I will say it to those who need to hear it. Sor Juana's example shows how intellectual rigor and moral clarity combined create power even in asymmetrical relationships.
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