Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Contested Name in Hybrid Identities

How individuals navigating multiple cultures often experience their names and identities as sites of conflict, negotiation, and creative synthesis.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana inhabited a liminal space in colonial Mexico—intellectually European, spiritually Catholic, culturally hybrid, and constrained by gender. Her name itself represented negotiation: Juana (Spanish-Christian) containing complexity that no single identifier could capture. This concept addresses the reality that names in hybrid or transcultural identities are often contested—claimed and rejected by different communities, carrying different meanings in different contexts. For diaspora peoples, children of mixed heritage, and those who traverse multiple worlds, names become sites of negotiation rather than simple markers. A name might mean belonging in one space and otherness in another; it might honor one ancestry while appearing to deny another. Sor Juana's approach was not to resolve this tension but to embody it intellectually and spiritually. The contested name reflects a deeper truth: identities formed across cultures are inherently complex and cannot be reduced to singular meanings. Understanding this dynamic prevents the demand for false coherence and instead validates the sophisticated negotiation required of those who live between worlds.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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