Recognizing the body as a historical document that records both oppression and survival, making embodied self-concept inseparable from justice and liberation.
Sor Juana's body carried the marks of her historical moment: the constraints of gender, the surveillance of religious authority, the hierarchies of colonial Mexico. Her body was not innocent of history, yet it also survived, resisted, and created. This concept asks us to recognize our bodies as archives—storing the histories of how we've been treated, what we've endured, and how we've persisted. Body image and self-concept become inseparable from justice when we acknowledge this. The ways you hold yourself, the spaces you claim or shrink from, the parts of your body you trust or suspect—these contain historical knowledge. This isn't a mandate to remain victimized by that history but to read it with honesty. Your body knows what has happened to it and what it has survived. Sor Juana's tradition suggests that authentic identity requires honoring this embodied archive, neither erasing the injustices nor being defined solely by them. Your body's resilience is part of your identity as much as your wounds are.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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