The deliberate withdrawal from complicity as a form of non-cooperation that preserves integrity under oppressive conditions.
Sor Juana's retreat into her convent cell and intellectual solitude represented both survival and resistance—a refusal to publicly recant her beliefs or cease intellectual work despite mounting pressure. This strategy differs from confrontational protest yet functions as genuine civil disobedience: non-participation in systems demanding ideological conformity. For movements facing severe repression, solitude-as-resistance offers a psychological and spiritual sustenance model that prevents complete capitulation. Sor Juana's tradition teaches that maintaining interior intellectual freedom and community with like-minded thinkers—even in isolation—undermines authoritarian claims of total control. This concept is particularly relevant for disobedients in totalitarian contexts, religious minorities, and marginalized communities who cannot openly protest but can withdraw consent through selective non-engagement, private knowledge-sharing, and cultural preservation.
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