The strategy of using writing and language to claim presence and identity when direct speech is forbidden or dangerous.
Sor Juana was silenced by ecclesiastical authority—forbidden to write, pressured to abandon intellectual pursuits. Yet her name persists through texts that challenged power while appearing to obey it. This concept recognizes that silence is often imposed, not chosen, and that marginalized people develop sophisticated methods to assert identity despite suppression. Writing, art, coded language, and indirect communication become acts of resistance when speaking openly invites punishment. Across cultures, women, religious minorities, and political prisoners use textual strategies to preserve identity and transmit truth. A name written in secret, a poem with hidden meanings, a journal kept despite prohibition—these are profound assertions of personhood. This framework validates underground cultures, oral traditions, and oblique expressions as legitimate forms of identity-making. It suggests that identity is not diminished by hidden expression; rather, the effort to preserve it despite censorship demonstrates its vital importance and creates a historical record that authorities cannot fully erase.
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