Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Right to Silence and Strategic Withdrawal

The right to refuse to speak, perform, or justify oneself; withdrawal as a form of power and self-protection.

Juana
Why It Matters

After decades of intellectual struggle, Sor Juana was pressured into silence. She sold her library, stopped writing, and withdrew from public discourse. This appears as tragedy—the silencing of a brilliant mind. Yet Sor Juana's tradition also recognizes silence as potentially a right: the right to refuse, to not perform intellectual labor for hostile audiences, to protect one's energy and dignity. This concept distinguishes between imposed silence (a violation) and chosen withdrawal (an exercise of power). The right to silence means the right to not justify oneself, to not engage with bad-faith criticism, to set boundaries. Yet silence also enables oppression: when marginalized people are pressured into silence, their absence from discourse reinforces the false appearance that they have nothing to contribute. This concept explores the paradox: silence can be both resistance and submission, protection and erasure. Understanding the right to silence means recognizing when silence serves the silenced person and when it serves their oppressors. It also means creating conditions where marginalized people can choose silence without it being interpreted as consent to their subordination.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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