The distinction between patronage relationships as free contracts versus systems that disguise dependency and claim ownership over a person's labor and loyalty.
Sor Juana navigated complex patron-client relationships that sustained her intellectual work but also threatened her autonomy. She maintained boundaries, refusing patrons' demands that conflicted with her conscience, and framed these relationships as exchanges of value rather than ownership claims. In libertarian justice, this principle distinguishes legitimate voluntary exchange from coercive dependency. A patron who supports a scholar in exchange for dedication and gratitude is different from a patron who claims ownership of the scholar's time, ideas, or loyalty beyond what was explicitly agreed. Sor Juana's insistence on maintaining intellectual independence while accepting material support models how to navigate patronage as contract rather than servitude. For property and freedom, this matters: many systems of dependence—from employment to academic advancement to artistic support—can masquerade as mutually beneficial when they actually transfer ownership rights over a person's output, autonomy, or time. True libertarian exchange requires clear terms, exit rights, and the freedom to decline or renegotiate.
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