Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Economics of Unfair Labor

Recognition that systems claiming fairness while extracting uncompensated intellectual, emotional, or domestic labor from specific groups remain fundamentally unjust.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana served as a servant in the Viceroy's household while developing extraordinary scholarship—her labor subsidized intellectual pursuits she was officially denied. This pattern repeats across civilizations: women perform uncompensated care work; colonized peoples provide free labor; enslaved persons create wealth they never access. No justice system can claim fairness while normalizing unpaid extraction of human capacity from any group. Economic fairness requires that all labor receives recognition and compensation, that intellectual contribution from marginalized groups counts equally, and that the time required for human flourishing gets protected regardless of one's social position. Sor Juana's eventual retreat to the convent after plague deaths suggests even her exceptional intellect could not sustain the cost of being valued for both labor and thinking simultaneously.

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