Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Speaking Self: Voice as Identity Practice

Understanding that claiming your voice—speaking, writing, and being heard—is essential to establishing your adopted identity as real and valid.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's ultimate act was to write—to create a body of work that insisted on her existence and significance. Her voice, through poetry, theology, and argument, became the proof of her selfhood. For adopted identity, this concept emphasizes that voice is not a secondary expression but central to identity itself. Speaking who you are—to yourself, to trusted others, eventually to the world—makes your identity real and claimed rather than hidden or theoretical. This can mean telling your adoption story, asserting your values, defending your choices, creating work that reflects your perspective. The act of being heard matters. Silence, even chosen silence, keeps identity provisional and unreal. Sor Juana teaches that the speaking self is the authentic self. Therefore, building your adopted identity requires finding and exercising your voice: claiming space to express your truth, refusing to be silenced, and insisting through your speech that you exist and that your existence means something.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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