The use of written texts to establish intellectual authority independent from voice, performance, or social permission—crucial for maintaining identity across code-switching contexts.
Sor Juana's commitment to written work rather than oral performance created a record of thought that could not be as easily controlled or reinterpreted by listeners. Text allows her ideas to circulate beyond the immediate social register in which she lived, reaching readers who might encounter her work differently than her contemporaries did. For code-switchers, textual autonomy provides a crucial tool: writing allows you to establish what you actually think, separate from how you perform in any given social context. Your written work becomes a reference point for your own identity, a place where code-switching is suspended or at least made visible and deliberate. When navigating double consciousness, the act of writing—journals, essays, arguments documented in language you control—creates an intellectual record that belongs to you alone. It becomes possible to say: this is what I think, independent of how I might have to present myself in various registers. Text becomes refuge and evidence simultaneously.
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