Strategic rejection of consumption as an expression of freedom and power, mirroring Sor Juana's refusal to accept limiting roles and expectations.
Sor Juana's most radical act was refusal: refusing imposed silence, prescribed gender roles, and intellectual limitations. In ethical consumption, refusal becomes a powerful practice. The ability to say no—to decline convenient purchases, resist marketing, reject trends, abstain from unnecessary consumption—is itself a luxury that demonstrates freedom and agency. This concept reframes refusal not as deprivation but as liberation. When we refuse, we claim power in a system designed to make us passive consumers. We refuse items made through exploitation, refuse planned obsolescence, refuse the constant messaging that equates consumption with fulfillment. Like Sor Juana's refusals, this is not about asceticism but about authentic choice. Ethical consumption sometimes means consuming less, but strategically, deliberately, with full awareness of the freedom that refusal represents.
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