The understanding that identity—gender, role, status—is partly imposed and partly self-created, requiring constant negotiation and remaking.
Sor Juana was born a woman in a system that defined women as intellectual subordinates, yet she constructed herself as a scholar, poet, and thinker. She didn't deny her womanhood; she rejected the limits placed upon it. This concept recognizes that fairness requires freedom to shape identity within constraints. Society assigns categories—gender, race, class, nation—that carry prescribed meanings and restrictions. Yet people continuously reinterpret, resist, and remake themselves within and against these categories. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that justice means creating space for people to author their own identities rather than merely accepting assignments. She used irony, persona, and strategic positioning to claim intellectual space society denied her. Applied practice includes protecting people's right to self-definition, challenging stereotypes that narrow possibility, and building institutions flexible enough to accommodate diverse ways of being and becoming.
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