A framework for recognizing and advocating for those denied agency and expression, paralleling Sor Juana's own suppression with the systematic silencing of animal perspectives.
Sor Juana's life embodied resistance against institutional silencing—her intellectual voice suppressed by religious and patriarchal authorities. This experience illuminates how animals exist in profound voicelessness within human systems of power. They cannot testify to their own experiences, cannot write their own defenses, cannot participate in the moral discussions that determine their fate. This concept asks us to become interpreters and advocates for those without human language, recognizing that silence does not equal absence of suffering or moral worth. Just as Sor Juana's ideas had to be reconstructed and fought for after suppression, we must actively reconstruct animal perspectives through empathy, scientific understanding, and ethical imagination. The duty to speak for the silenced becomes a moral imperative rooted in justice.
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