Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Solitude as Identity Work Practice

The necessity of protected space and time for self-reflection, examining how Sor Juana's convent cell enabled her identity development.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's convent provided something paradoxical: constraint and freedom. The enclosure protected her from marriage and domestic servitude, giving her uninterrupted time for intellectual work and self-examination. She created a kind of solitude-in-community that allowed her to think deeply about identity without constant social performance demands. Contemporary life rarely offers such protected space, yet identity examination requires it. For cisgender people examining their identity, this framework highlights the necessity of creating times and spaces away from constant social expectation—moments to ask yourself genuine questions without immediately performing answers for others. This might mean meditation, journaling, time in nature, or simply protecting margins of non-productivity where thinking can happen. Sor Juana's model suggests that deepening relationship with your identity requires solitude, not as escape but as essential practice.

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Identity & Justice
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