Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Performative Self in Oppression

The psychological strategy of creating and maintaining different presentations of self across contexts to navigate power structures and protect one's authentic identity.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana performed obedience, piety, and deference while cultivating fierce intellectual independence in private correspondence and coded works. She understood that survival required presenting an acceptable self while protecting her authentic identity from institutional capture. This performative splitting occurs across cultures wherever individuals face surveillance and control based on identity. LGBTQ individuals in hostile environments, ethnic minorities managing racism, working-class people navigating elite spaces—all develop skills of strategic self-presentation. This is not inauthenticity but rather a sophisticated psychological adaptation to oppression. The performative self is rational and protective, but it carries costs: the energy required to maintain multiple selves, the internalization of external judgments, the fragmentation of identity. Recognizing this pattern validates the experience of individuals living under identity threat and explains why liberation requires not just individual psychology shift but structural change that eliminates the need for such performance.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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