The deliberate practice of adjusting one's name, voice, and identity presentation for different audiences while maintaining internal coherence and integrity.
Sor Juana calibrated her intellectual claims, religious expressions, and public persona depending on her audience—addressing church authorities differently than patrons, writing philosophy differently than poetry. This strategic flexibility represented not inauthenticity but sophisticated navigation of power. Many people across cultures practice strategic self-presentation: using different names in different contexts (birth name, professional name, community name), adjusting language and cultural reference points for different audiences, presenting different aspects of identity depending on institutional context. This concept distinguishes between fragmentation and strategic coherence—the ability to present genuinely different facets of oneself to different audiences while maintaining an integrated sense of identity. Strategic self-presentation becomes essential for people navigating multiple cultures where different communities have different expectations and constraints. The practice requires metacognitive awareness: knowing which identity elements to emphasize where, understanding audience expectations, and maintaining enough internal coherence that the strategic shifts strengthen rather than destabilize the core self. This is a sophisticated identity skill, not a form of deception.
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