The deliberate choice of when to make oneself publicly visible and when to withdraw, navigating between recognition and protection in power-imbalanced systems.
Sor Juana navigated colonial Mexico by strategically choosing her public visibility—publishing certain works while maintaining privacy about others, engaging with power while protecting her intellectual independence. In postcolonial identity work, this becomes a crucial framework for understanding that visibility isn't always liberation. Marginalized individuals must sometimes choose strategic silence to preserve autonomy, avoid surveillance, or protect vulnerable communities. Conversely, strategic visibility means placing yourself in public discourse when it serves decolonial goals. This concept rejects the false binary between assimilation and total rejection of dominant structures. It acknowledges that postcolonial subjects operate within systems they did not create and must sometimes navigate them skillfully. The practice involves constant assessment: What does this moment require? Who benefits from my visibility? When does stepping back preserve my power? Strategic visibility and silence become tools of agency rather than shame.
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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