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Concept
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Linguistic Rights and Cultural Sovereignty

The political right to use, preserve, and develop one's language as an act of cultural sovereignty and identity maintenance.

Juana
Why It Matters

Though Sor Juana wrote primarily in Spanish, she inhabited a world where Nahuatl and other Indigenous languages were systematically suppressed under colonial rule. Language is not merely communication—it encodes identity, history, and ways of understanding the world. This concept recognizes that political identity is deeply embedded in linguistic practice. When a group's language is marginalized, criminalized, or lost, a dimension of political identity is erased. Across multicultural societies, linguistic rights become contested: debates over official languages, educational language policy, and immigrant language maintenance all reflect deeper identity struggles. The framework of linguistic sovereignty asserts that communities have the right to determine which languages are spoken, taught, and valued in their spaces. This extends beyond preservation to active development—allowing languages to evolve, create new vocabulary, and remain living traditions. Political identity strengthens when people can express themselves authentically in their heritage language while also navigating dominant languages.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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