Documenting your own intellectual development and knowledge production as a way to establish identity continuity and legacy.
Sor Juana included in her "Reply to Sor Filotea" a detailed intellectual autobiography—her education, her reading habits, her evolution as a thinker—to establish that her identity as an intellectual was not accidental but deliberately cultivated. This intellectual biography became identity evidence: "this is who I am because this is the knowledge I have acquired and the thinking I have done." This concept applies powerfully to multicultural identity formation: as individuals navigate multiple cultural contexts, documenting their own intellectual journey becomes a form of identity consolidation and authority-building. An intellectual biography is not vanity; it is a record that counters erasure and establishes you as the primary authority on your own identity development. For people whose backgrounds span multiple cultures, languages, or traditions, maintaining a conscious record of how you have integrated and learned from these influences becomes important identity work. It establishes continuity and agency in your own becoming.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.