Using argumentation and writing to actively construct and defend your identity against external judgment, as Sor Juana did in her famous Reply.
When the Bishop challenged her right to intellectual life, Sor Juana wrote her Reply—a masterpiece of self-defense that became self-authorship. She didn't accept the imposed narrative but wrote her own story of who she was and why. For those with adopted identities, defense is not merely reactive; it is generative. Writing, speaking, and arguing about yourself becomes an act of claiming authorship over your narrative. Instead of letting others define your identity—as abandoned, rescued, displaced, or exceptional—you articulate it yourself, on your terms, with full complexity. Sor Juana's Reply shows how intellectual rigor applied to self-representation transforms defense into creation. Your story about yourself, told in your own voice with your own reasoning, becomes the primary text through which identity is constructed and claimed.
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