Understanding that how you claim identity—intellectual, gendered, creative, autonomous—is itself a form of moral and political resistance.
Sor Juana's identity as a woman scholar, a poet, a nun, a Mexican intellectual, and an independent thinker was not merely personal—it was inherently political. Each aspect of her self-presentation and self-definition challenged the limited categories available to women in her society. This concept recognizes that moral courage includes the ongoing work of defining yourself authentically rather than accepting imposed definitions. In everyday contexts, identity becomes political when you insist on your full complexity: claiming professional identity alongside caregiving, intellectual capacity alongside emotional depth, cultural heritage alongside contemporary belonging. It means refusing simplified versions of yourself created for others' comfort. The daily moral courage required to maintain an authentic, multifaceted identity against social pressure to flatten or specialize is profound. Sor Juana demonstrates that living coherently across multiple dimensions of selfhood requires continuous courageous choices.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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