Periagoge
Concept
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Silence as Sovereign Resistance

Strategic withdrawal from public discourse and productivity as an assertion of property rights and refusal of institutional control.

Juana
Why It Matters

In her final years, Sor Juana's silence—her cessation of writing and intellectual production—was not defeat but sovereignty. She chose to stop producing for institutions that demanded control. In libertarian frameworks, silence and withdrawal are expressions of property rights: you own your voice, your labor, your output, and you may choose not to offer it. Silence resists the demand that all subjects (especially women, especially the colonized) must constantly produce value for institutional benefit. Sor Juana's silence said: my intellectual labor is my property, and I will not surrender it. This differs from enforced silence, which is oppression; sovereign silence is chosen refusal. The concept acknowledges that libertarian freedom includes the right to non-participation, to withhold contribution, to refuse the role of productive subject. In contexts where institutions (state, church, corporation) demand constant output and visibility, silence becomes a radical assertion of ownership over one's own time, attention, and creative capacity. Strategic silence protects freedom when speech has been colonized by power.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
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