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The Convent as Liminal Naming Space

A framework for understanding how institutional spaces can function as threshold territories where alternative identities and names become temporarily possible.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana entered the convent partly to create intellectual freedom within a constrained society—her name shifted from Juana Ramírez to Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz. This spatial choice illuminates how naming operates within institutional contexts across cultures. The convent functioned as a liminal space: neither fully secular nor fully domestic, where she could adopt a new name, claim intellectual authority, and establish an alternative identity. This concept applies to how people in multicultural contexts use institutions—universities, artistic communities, religious spaces—to negotiate identity shifts and claim new names or roles. Liminal spaces temporarily suspend ordinary social rules, allowing people to experiment with identity without permanent social penalty. Understanding these spaces helps us recognize why certain institutions become crucial for people crossing cultural boundaries, and how formal name changes or role adoptions within them represent genuine transformations rather than mere administrative shifts.

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Identity & Justice
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