Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Invisible Labor Question

Ethical consumption requires confronting the hidden human costs behind affordable goods and demanding visibility for exploited workers.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's life was sustained by the labor of enslaved and indigenous people, a reality she was aware of yet could not fully escape given her historical moment. Her intellectual integrity lay in acknowledging contradiction rather than denying it. Applied to ethical consumption, this teaches us to interrogate the 'invisible labor' behind cheap goods. Fast fashion, electronics, and agricultural products often depend on underpaid workers, child labor, or modern slavery. Ethical consumption demands we make this visible—researching brands, supporting fair-wage certifications, and accepting that truly ethical goods cost more because they pay workers fairly. We cannot claim intellectual honesty while ignoring the human cost of our consumption. Like Sor Juana's unflinching self-examination, ethical consumers must ask uncomfortable questions: Who made this? What were they paid? What were their working conditions? This visibility is not guilt-focused but justice-focused, transforming consumption into a practice of recognizing and honoring human dignity.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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