The written defense of one's actions and conscience as a form of public testimony and moral witness.
Sor Juana's Respuesta a Sor Filotea is a masterwork of civil disobedience literature—a carefully argued letter defending her right to intellectual life against ecclesiastical authority. The justification letter appears across traditions: MLK's Letter from a Birmingham Jail, Nelson Mandela's court testimony, indigenous leaders' declarations of sovereignty. This is the genre where the accused becomes the witness, the silenced becomes the speaker, and moral authority inverts. By writing her justification, Sor Juana claimed the right to interpret her own life and actions, refusing the Church's monopoly on meaning. The letter format is strategic: intimate, reasoned, appealing to conscience rather than force. It preserves the dissenter's voice for history and creates a record of resistance. For civil disobedience across traditions, the justification letter is crucial because it transforms punishment into platform, allowing the marginalized to name their own oppression and articulate their vision of justice to present and future audiences.
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