To examine one's female identity is to ask what has been absorbed as natural femininity and what was installed by systems that benefited from women's self-limitation — to distinguish between what the self genuinely is and what it was shaped into in order to be acceptable, useful, or safe. Juana undertook this examination with both intellectual precision and personal cost: her persistent refusal of the identity her world had prepared for women (silent, domestic, devoted to the service of others' intellectual lives rather than her own) was not simply personal temperament but a philosophical act. The examined female identity does not arrive at a single answer but at the freedom to keep asking the question.
Each step builds on the last.