Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Right to Refuse Prescribed Roles

The fundamental right to reject assigned social roles and claim alternatives, even when such rejection carries social or institutional penalties.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana refused multiple prescribed roles: she would not accept the silent, obedient woman her society demanded; she would not become merely a nun serving institutional interests; she would not abandon intellectual pursuits for domestic duties. The right to refuse prescribed roles is radical because most oppressive systems function through role assignment—telling people who they are and what they should do based on identity. When women are prescribed as mothers and caretakers, when colonized peoples are prescribed as servants, when poor people are prescribed as compliant workers, role-based systems prevent self-determination. In human rights frameworks, this right protects people's capacity to shape their own lives. It includes the right to work or not work, to form families or not, to pursue callings others deem unsuitable, to present gender in non-conforming ways. Sor Juana's assertion that she could be simultaneously nun and scholar, religious and intellectual, challenged the system's ability to contain her. Her example shows that rights frameworks must protect not just freedom within prescribed roles but freedom to reject roles altogether.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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