A form of civil disobedience through strategic silence, renunciation, or retreat when continuing participation would require compromising core principles.
In her later life, Sor Juana ceased writing and eventually renounced her books and intellectual work, reportedly under pressure from her confessor. Whether this was forced submission, strategic withdrawal, or a genuine spiritual choice remains debated. This concept examines a particular form of civil disobedience: the refusal to participate, the withdrawal of labor and talent, the renunciation of privilege or position as a statement of principle. This differs from passive acceptance; it is an active choice to cease cooperation with an unjust system, even at great personal cost. Thoreau's retreat to Walden, monastic withdrawal from worldly affairs, and contemporary practices like boycotts and strikes all embody this principle. The conscience-driven withdrawal says: I cannot continue to function within this system without betraying my integrity. Sor Juana's silence, whether chosen or imposed, demonstrates the power and ambiguity of this form of dissent—it removes the dissident from public view while potentially amplifying the statement through absence.
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