Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Identity Bifurcation and Concealment

The psychological practice of splitting one's identity into public (parental) and hidden (authentic self) to survive oppressive conditions.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana maintained a public persona of obedient nun while cultivating hidden intellectual work and correspondence. Many parents similarly develop bifurcated identities: the public self that performs parental role perfectly, and the hidden self with unmet needs, intellectual hunger, or conflicting desires. This splitting is often a survival strategy in contexts where authentic parental identity threatens social standing or family stability. Yet bifurcation extracts a cost: exhaustion, alienation, and the loss of integration. This concept examines how parents internalize the demand to conceal parts of themselves and what reclaiming wholeness requires. Sor Juana's life shows both the necessity and the tragedy of this split. Justice in parental identity means creating conditions where parents need not hide—where becoming a parent does not require losing the right to be seen in one's full complexity.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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