The practice of holding multiple, sometimes contradictory identities simultaneously as a survival and resistance strategy across cultural boundaries.
Sor Juana navigated the colonial Mexican world by embodying many identities: nun, scholar, poet, counselor to the viceroy's wife, indigenous descendent, woman in a male domain. Rather than viewing this as fragmentation, her life demonstrates how strategic multiplicity can be a source of power and resilience. She used different contexts to express different aspects of her intellectual self, protecting her authority while expanding her influence. This framework helps us understand how people across cultures maintain complex identities—honoring heritage while engaging modernity, navigating multiple languages and value systems, expressing different facets in different communities. Identity isn't a fixed label but a dynamic negotiation of context, audience, and survival. Sor Juana's model shows that multiplicity isn't confusion; it's sophisticated navigation that allows people to claim space in worlds not initially designed for them.
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