The practice of restoring the historical record, intellectual contributions, and dignity of those harmed by institutional injustice across generations.
Sor Juana's own work was suppressed and nearly lost; restoration of her legacy required centuries of scholarly recovery, reframing her contributions, and acknowledging the injustice she faced. In restorative justice frameworks, legacy restoration addresses harms that extend beyond individual perpetrators and victims to affect communities and historical understanding. This includes recovering suppressed histories, amplifying silenced voices, creating accurate historical records, and public acknowledgment of systemic injustices. Legacy restoration recognizes that harm echoes through generations—descendants of those systematically denied education or opportunity continue experiencing consequences. Restorative approaches must address these long-term impacts by creating conditions for historical truth-telling, honoring those whose contributions were erased, and ensuring future generations inherit corrected narratives. This is not punishment of long-dead perpetrators but transformation of present conditions and future possibilities. It requires institutions to examine their own complicity in historical harm and actively work to restore dignity to those wronged. Through Sor Juana's example, we understand that true restoration sometimes requires centuries of work, institutional humility, and commitment to justice that transcends individual incidents to address systemic, historical wrongs.
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