Using physical acts of non-compliance—refusal to perform, to appear, to conform—as intellectual and political statements about identity.
Sor Juana's choice to wear the habit, cut her hair, and embrace austere physicality was simultaneously an act of refusal: she refused the feminized body demanded of women in her era, refused ornament, refused availability, refused the performance of beauty and submission. Embodied refusal is not merely negative; it is a positive assertion of an alternative identity. For modern practitioners, this concept explores how your physical choices communicate what you refuse to be. This might involve how you dress, move, present, or decline to present yourself. It recognizes that body as identity includes the power to say no with your flesh—to refuse roles, to reject aesthetics imposed from outside, to make your body unavailable for scripts not of your choosing. Such refusals are often read as defiance, but they are acts of self-definition and intellectual honesty made visible in physical form.
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