Using written response and personal testimony to publicly contest authority and reclaim narrative authority over one's own life and thought.
Sor Juana's Respuesta a Sor Filotea stands as a foundational text of feminist and postcolonial resistance—a letter that becomes testimony, argument, and autobiography. By responding to criticism in writing, Sor Juana seized control of the narrative about her intellectual work and refused to accept silencing. For postcolonial decolonization, epistolary testimony and written response represent crucial tools for counter-narrative. When colonized peoples write back, they assert presence, authority, and the right to self-representation. The letter form itself—intimate yet public, personal yet political—offers a framework for marginalized voices to engage with power structures while maintaining autonomy. This practice recognizes that decolonization involves not just gaining political independence but winning the right to tell one's own story in one's own voice.
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