The practice of defining oneself through conversation, debate, and engagement with others' ideas rather than through isolated declaration.
Sor Juana's intellectual identity formed through dialogue: with Church fathers, with classical authors, with her patrons, with critics, and with readers. Her writings are filled with voices in conversation, debate, and mutual challenge. She modeled intellectual identity as inherently relational rather than solitary. This concept challenges individualistic models of identity that present the self as pre-formed, instead showing how we become ourselves through engagement. Across cultures, dialogical identity work appears in oral traditions, collaborative artistic practices, and intellectual communities. Name and identity aren't fixed possessions but continuously formed through exchange. For contemporary applications, this framework validates identity work that happens in relationship, conversation, and community rather than requiring isolated self-discovery. Dialogue as the site of identity formation suggests that we know ourselves through who we engage with and what we say in response to others.
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