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Concept
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Rhetorical Propriety in Intellectual Advocacy

The art of arguing for one's intellectual position while maintaining the respect, deference, and linguistic propriety required by hierarchical role relationships.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana was a master of rhetoric—she employed flattery, deference, wit, and strategic framing to advance her intellectual claims while respecting ecclesiastical authority. This sophisticated deployment of language reflects the Confucian virtue of 禮 (lǐ), often translated as propriety or ritual—the appropriate conduct and speech that maintains harmony within hierarchical relationships. She could challenge authority through careful rhetorical positioning, defending her intellectual rights without appearing rebellious. In Confucian frameworks, how one speaks is as important as what one says; the form must match the content and the relationship. This concept teaches that advocating for intellectual autonomy, justice, or role rights requires rhetorical skill aligned with hierarchical respect. For practitioners, it suggests that Confucian role identity is not merely intellectual position but communicative performance—the ability to argue persuasively while maintaining appropriate deference, thereby transforming relationships rather than disrupting them. Propriety becomes a tool for justice.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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