Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Refusal as Identity Practice

The deliberate choice to refuse prescribed social roles and expectations as a valid form of identity work and self-definition.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's refusals are as significant as her affirmations: she refused to marry, refused to cease intellectual pursuits, ultimately refused to renounce her writings. Each refusal was an identity assertion—claiming the right to define herself by what she rejected. For cisgender individuals examining their identity, refusal becomes a powerful analytical tool. Rather than starting with fixed identity claims, examining what one refuses—what gender performances, expectations, or roles feel inauthentic—can clarify authentic identity. Sor Juana's example validates negative identity definition: you are partly what you refuse to be. In cisgender identity examination, this might mean identifying restrictive gender norms you reject, career paths you refuse despite gendered expectations, or relationship models you won't accept. Refusal is not merely reactive; it's generative. Applied practically, this framework encourages asking: What do I refuse? What does that refusal reveal about my actual values and identity? Refusal work becomes identity work.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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