The practice of building coherent selfhood across multiple languages, intellectual traditions, and cultural frameworks simultaneously.
Sor Juana mastered Spanish, Latin, Nahuatl, and indigenous knowledge systems, weaving them into a singular intellectual voice rather than compartmentalizing them. This polyglot approach reveals that multilingual identity need not fragment the self but can instead create a richer, more nuanced consciousness. For people navigating bicultural, immigrant, or postcolonial identities, polyglot identity construction offers a framework: rather than choosing between languages or traditions, one integrates them into an authentic whole. Each linguistic tradition carries distinct ways of thinking, naming, and being. Sor Juana's example demonstrates that claiming multiple languages as part of one's identity strengthens rather than weakens it. This concept challenges the myth that coherent identity requires monolingual or monocultural foundations, revealing instead that linguistic plurality can express deeper truth about who we are.
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