The claim to bodily autonomy and narrative ownership as foundational to identity, resisting institutions and families that control both.
Sor Juana chose the convent partly to escape marriage and forced motherhood—to claim authority over her body and her life's narrative. This fundamental claim—that you belong to yourself—animated her intellectual and spiritual work. Within families, authority over story and body is often contested: parents control children's narratives, patriarchs control women's bodies, traditions control individual choices. This concept centers the right to author your own experience and inhabit your own flesh. For family identity, it means examining how much narrative control has been exerted over you and your ancestors. Whose stories are told about you? Who authorized your inherited identity? What bodily autonomy did ancestors possess or lack? Inherited stories often reflect others' narratives of family members rather than those members' own self-descriptions. By claiming authority over your story and body, you transform family identity from something done to you into something you actively participate in shaping. This framework helps families recognize where ancestors resisted violation—and where current members deserve the same autonomy. Sor Juana's life sanctifies the claim that you are not merely a chapter in your family's story; you are its author.
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