Constructing personal identity through values, knowledge, and character rather than through status brands and consumer categories.
Sor Juana fiercely defended her identity as intellectual and writer despite a society that offered her limited roles; her example teaches us to construct identity independently of market-defined categories. Consumer culture pressures us to become our purchasing profiles—defined by brands, lifestyle products, and status symbols. Ethical consumption partly means resisting this reduction. It means asking: Who am I apart from what I buy? What defines me beyond my consumer category? Sor Juana found identity in learning, creativity, courage, and integrity—qualities that cannot be purchased but must be cultivated. This doesn't mean rejecting all consumption, but rather freeing identity from the marketplace's definitions. When we stop using consumption to prove our worth, to signal status, or to fill identity gaps, we make space for choosing what we genuinely need and value. We become less susceptible to marketing that exploits our deepest insecurities. This liberation—from market-defined identity—paradoxically makes ethical consumption more possible, because we choose from authentic values rather than from the anxiety of how we'll be perceived.
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