How names and identities born from social exclusion or ambiguity can paradoxically grant freedom and intellectual power.
Sor Juana's own name carried the weight of ambiguity—her birth status, her positioning outside traditional family hierarchies, and her existence in the liminal space between Spanish and indigenous worlds all shaped her identity in ways that initially seemed limiting. Yet this very marginalization liberated her from certain expectations, allowing her to pursue knowledge and argument with a boldness that legitimate heirs could not risk. This concept explores how individuals whose identities are deemed illegitimate, hybrid, or uncertain by dominant cultures often develop exceptional intellectual resilience and creative insight. Names and identities formed at the intersection of cultures, genders, classes, or legal statuses carry what appears as liability but functions as advantage. Understanding this paradox reframes how we perceive identity naming across cultures, recognizing that exclusion can forge distinctive epistemic power.
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