The practice of authoring one's own identity narrative rather than accepting labels imposed by poverty, gender, or institutional power.
Poor and marginalized people face constant external definition: undeserving, lazy, criminal, less-intelligent. Sor Juana refused these imposed narratives, insisting on her intellectual authority and defending her right to study despite critics calling her vain or unseemly. Self-definition is an act of identity reclamation. This concept recognizes that poverty often comes with stigmatizing narratives; liberation includes rejecting internalized shame and authoring counter-narratives. Sor Juana wrote herself into existence as a brilliant theologian, philosopher, and poet—categories her society wanted to deny her. For those in poverty, this practice means articulating who you are beyond economic metrics: your expertise, creativity, values, and aspirations. Writing, speaking, creating art, and testifying become tools of self-definition. The framework suggests that identity work—deliberately narrating yourself—is essential resistance to dehumanizing poverty frameworks.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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