The practice of maintaining coherent selfhood while embodying contradictory social roles—daughter and nun, subject and intellectual, woman and scholar.
Sor Juana inhabited roles that colonial society deemed incompatible: she was a criada (servant-companion) to the viceroy's wife, a nun bound by obedience, an intellectual claiming the right to knowledge, and a woman in a patriarchal church. Rather than fragment into contradiction, her writings reveal continuous effort to integrate these identities through ethical principle and intellectual rigor. Confucian role identity traditionally assumes hierarchy and harmony among roles, yet Sor Juana's life exemplifies modern experience where roles genuinely conflict. This concept addresses the integration work required: How do I remain one authentic person across multiple social positions? What principles bind my various roles together? Sor Juana found coherence through commitment to truth-seeking and justice across all roles. For contemporary practitioners navigating professional, familial, civic, and personal identities, this concept provides a framework: coherence emerges not from role elimination but from discovering core principles that your various roles should all serve.
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.