The deliberate adoption of intellectual life as a form of self-determination and resistance against imposed social roles.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz claimed intellectual pursuit as her chosen identity, rejecting marriage and domesticity to become a scholar and writer. This concept examines how adopting an intellectual vocation becomes an act of freedom—a way to author your own life rather than accept predetermined social scripts. For those navigating adopted identity, this illuminates how we can consciously choose frameworks of meaning that reflect our authentic selves. Sor Juana's example shows that chosen identity requires courage, as it often conflicts with given identities imposed by family, culture, or expectation. Her life demonstrates that intellectual work itself can be a form of claiming agency. The tension between what society assigns and what we claim for ourselves becomes creative rather than merely conflictual.
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