Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Identity as Multiplicity

The understanding that a person contains many legitimate identities simultaneously—scholar, woman, religious believer, artist—and that fairness requires honoring all dimensions rather than forcing exclusion.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana inhabited multiple identities that her society demanded she compartmentalize: nun and intellectual, woman and writer, believer and skeptical questioner. Rather than choosing one, she insisted on the legitimacy of all. This concept transforms how we think about fairness in identity politics. Civilizations collapse when they force people into narrow boxes, suppressing essential parts of who they are. Fair systems allow individuals to be complex: a CEO can be an artist; a laborer can be a philosopher; a caregiver can be an inventor. Sor Juana teaches that identity is not singular but layered and evolving. Justice requires that institutions—schools, workplaces, governments—recognize and accommodate this multiplicity rather than demand conformity to one primary category. When fairness requires you to choose between your intellect and your womanhood, your faith and your reason, or your heritage and your ambition, the system itself is unjust. True equity honors people's full humanity.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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