The act of defending one's ideas, identity, and intellectual space as both a justice claim and a prerequisite for genuine reconciliation.
Sor Juana's "Response to Sor Filotea" is perhaps the most famous intellectual self-defense in colonial literature. She did not accept criticism passively or apologize for her existence; she articulated her right to think, write, and teach. In the justice-forgiveness framework, self-defense is often seen as incompatible with reconciliation, yet Sor Juana's example reveals its necessity. Genuine forgiveness cannot occur when one party must deny their own validity or accept diminishment. Justice requires that the harmed party defend their dignity and perspective. This is not aggression but clarification—establishing boundaries and asserting one's full humanity. Her tradition teaches that forgiveness without self-defense risks enabling further harm, while self-defense without openness to dialogue risks entrenchment. The balance lies in defending truth while remaining willing to hear others, creating conditions for authentic rather than false reconciliation.
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