Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Consumption and the Commons

Prioritizing shared, collective resources and community-based consumption models over individual accumulation and private ownership.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's intellectual life existed within communal structures—the convent, the scholarly community, networks of correspondence—yet she also fought for her individual right to privacy and solitude necessary for thought. This tension between community and individual needs illuminates ethical consumption challenges. Rather than assuming consumption must be individual—each household buying everything separately—this concept suggests valuing commons: tool libraries, community gardens, shared transportation, cooperative housing, communal kitchens. These models reduce total resource extraction, create interdependence that builds community bonds, and often make ethical options accessible to those with less individual wealth. They reflect Sor Juana's understanding that intellectual and material freedom are collective projects, not merely individual achievements. Ethical consumption, understood through this lens, becomes about building systems where necessities are shared and luxuries less urgent. It's less about buying the right thing and more about creating structures where consumption itself becomes less central to how we meet our needs and build meaning.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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