Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Truth-Telling as Liberation Practice

The practice of speaking difficult truths about power and injustice as essential to freedom and the recognition of rights.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's *Respuesta* is an act of truth-telling: naming the injustice of women's exclusion from intellectual life, refusing to apologize for her ambitions, and declaring her right to knowledge and voice. Truth-telling in contexts of power imbalance is dangerous and liberatory—it names realities that institutions prefer to hide, and it invites others to recognize injustice they may have accepted as natural. Libertarian justice depends on the practice of truth-telling: people must be free to speak about how systems operate, how power is distributed unfairly, and how their rights are violated. When authorities punish truth-telling or demand silence about injustice, they protect their monopoly on power. Sor Juana risked her position and comfort to speak truthfully about women's capacities and rights. This concept recognizes that building free societies requires protecting whistleblowers, journalists, activists, and ordinary people who report what they've witnessed. It means defending the right to be wrong while seeking truth, to challenge official narratives, and to name uncomfortable realities. Truth-telling is not sentiment or virtue alone—it is a material practice that shifts power relations by distributing knowledge and breaking the silence that protects injustice. Sor Juana's courage models this as essential to libertarian practice.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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