Examining how consumption choices construct and express identity, and the ethical implications of building self through purchase decisions, following Sor Juana's complex navigation of identity.
Sor Juana carefully constructed her intellectual identity within constraints of gender, race, and institutional power. She understood that identity is performed, negotiated, and politically charged. Contemporary consumption is deeply identity work: we buy to signal who we are or who we wish to be. But ethical consumption requires examining this dynamic honestly. When we purchase luxury brands to establish status, are we buying the product or buying membership in a class narrative? When we consume 'conscious' goods, are we solving problems or purchasing moral identity? Sor Juana's example teaches intersectional awareness: our choices reflect and reinforce systems of power. Ethical consumption means becoming conscious of the identity work purchase performs, asking whether it serves liberation or reinscribes hierarchies. It means considering whose identity narratives are centered in marketing (typically wealthy, Western, often lighter-skinned). True ethical consumption involves questioning not just what we buy but what our buying says about how we've internalized systems of worth and belonging.
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