The act of composing and circulating written work as direct resistance to censorship and erasure of marginalized voices.
Sor Juana's continued literary production despite prohibitions—her poetry, plays, theological arguments, and personal correspondence—constitutes civil disobedience through cultural action. Writing itself became her refusal: each manuscript challenged the claim that women lacked intellectual capacity, that laypeople could not engage theology, that indigenous perspectives had no value. For civil disobedience traditions, Sor Juana's model elevates artistic and intellectual production to the status of political action. Her work demonstrates how marginalized communities can practice disobedience through counter-narratives, alternative histories, and cultural assertion. This concept validates that civil disobedience need not be dramatic confrontation; it can be the quiet, persistent act of speaking and recording what authorities wish silenced. Writing, publishing, and archiving become acts of resistance that preserve forbidden knowledge and amplify suppressed identities.
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