The recognition that strategic silence, retreat, and non-participation are sometimes necessary political responses when the cost of speech becomes unsustainable.
After her "Response to Sor Filotea," Sor Juana gradually withdrew from intellectual production, eventually ceasing to write. Her silence was not acceptance of authority but the limit of her capacity to resist while remaining physically alive. This concept challenges romantic notions of constant resistance and acknowledges that oppressive systems can make speaking unbearable. Sometimes silence becomes the only available form of dignity—refusal to provide the intellectual labor oppressors demand, retreat from visibility that brings danger. Across cultures and contexts, people facing acute oppression employ strategic silence and withdrawal as forms of self-preservation and resistance. Understanding political identity requires recognizing that silence, too, can be political—it can express refusal, protect vulnerable selfhood, and conserve energy for survival. This concept prevents misreading withdrawal as passive acceptance while acknowledging its genuine costs. Sor Juana's retreat suggests that sustained resistance against overwhelming power may be impossible; political identity sometimes requires recognizing limits and choosing preservation over voice. This framework validates the experiences of those whose circumstances permit only minimal forms of resistance or refusal.
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