Children possess the right to artistic, intellectual, and emotional expression without censorship or enforced conformity.
Sor Juana's prolific output—poetry, drama, theological writings, letters—represented her assertion of the right to creative expression despite pressure toward silence and obedience. This concept establishes that children's rights fundamentally include the freedom to create: to write, draw, perform, build, and imagine without fear of punishment or ridicule. Creative expression is not frivolous; it is how children process experience, develop identity, and make sense of their world. Restricting children's creative freedom—through rigid curricula, punishment for nonconformity, or mockery of their ideas—constitutes a form of psychological harm. In Sor Juana's tradition, silencing a voice wastes human potential and damages the soul. For children's rights, this means protecting spaces for artistic exploration, unconventional thinking, and emotional honesty. Schools, homes, and communities must actively encourage rather than suppress children's creative impulses. This includes protecting children from algorithms that monetize their expression and from adults who exploit their creativity for profit, recognizing that authentic self-expression is essential to human dignity and flourishing.
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