The framework for understanding how ideas, art, and intellectual work are created, valued, and distributed as economic goods in a free market.
Sor Juana was a professional intellectual—her verses, plays, and theological arguments were cultural commodities. Yet she operated in a constrained market where her gender, status, and institutional position limited what she could claim or sell. Economics of cultural production examines who controls the means of intellectual creation and reaps its benefits. In libertarian justice, this means asking: who owns the presses, the pulpits, the publishing houses? Who gets paid for ideas? Sor Juana wrote brilliantly but could not fully capitalize on her work; much was published under others' names or control. This concept applies libertarian principles to the creative economy: freedom to produce, to contract, to profit, and to own one's work. It opposes both guild monopolies (which restrict who can create) and state patronage systems (which demand conformity) and institutional ownership of individual work. Applied today, it challenges corporate IP systems that alienate creators from their output, and supports conditions where artists, writers, and thinkers can independently create and trade their work in open markets.
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