The systemic injustice of pressuring marginalized people to remain quiet about their exclusion, and the moral imperative to speak truth even when authority forbids it.
Sor Juana lived under constant pressure to abandon her intellectual pursuits and accept the 'proper' role for a colonial woman. The church, society, and eventually even her own religious order demanded her silence on matters of thought, identity, and justice. This concept examines how fairness is betrayed when systems demand that oppressed groups stay silent about their oppression. Throughout history, every society that advanced justice had to break this tyranny—recognizing that silencing people is itself an act of violence. Sor Juana refused this tyranny through her writing, her defenses of her right to knowledge, and her willingness to speak even when doing so risked her reputation and freedom. Fair societies must protect not just the right to speak, but the freedom from being coerced into silence about injustice, creating conditions where truth-telling becomes possible and valued.
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