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Concept
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The Scholar's Persona as Identity Claim

Understanding how adopting a recognized role or title can function as both mask and genuine self-expression simultaneously.

Juana
Why It Matters

When Sor Juana claimed the identity of scholar, poet, and nun, she was simultaneously adopting socially constructed personas and asserting authentic self-expression. The scholar's mask was real—her learning was genuine, her intellectual commitments sincere. Yet it was also strategically chosen as a persona that granted her visibility and credibility. This concept examines how we adopt roles not as false disguises but as genuine expressions of who we are becoming, which paradoxically are also masks in that they are constructed, selective, and performed. The Sophía tradition illuminates that identity itself is constructed through personas we inhabit. Rather than seeking an 'authentic self' beneath masks, we might instead ask: Which personas allow me to grow? Which align with my values? Which are freely chosen versus imposed? Sor Juana's example shows that being a scholar-persona was authentically her, even as it was also strategically deployed to claim space and authority others tried to deny her.

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Identity & Justice
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