The relational practice of being known and affirmed by communities that recognize one's capabilities and worth beyond economic circumstance.
Despite her poverty, Sor Juana was part of communities—religious, intellectual, and social—that recognized her extraordinary capabilities and affirmed her worth and importance. Her community of readers, fellow scholars, and supporters provided relational confirmation of her identity as a significant intellectual figure. This concept recognizes that identity is not purely individual but relational; we develop and sustain a sense of self through relationships with others who see us, affirm us, and reflect back our capabilities and value. For people experiencing poverty, which often isolates and erases, community becomes essential to identity formation and maintenance. Communities provide witness to capabilities poverty obscures, offer alternative frameworks for understanding worth, create spaces of belonging despite economic marginalization, and collectively affirm identities that dominant culture denies. Building and strengthening communities based on mutual recognition, shared learning, and collective affirmation becomes a practice essential to developing identities beyond poverty's definitions.
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