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Concept
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Textual Identity: Writing as Self-Making Practice

The understanding that identities are constructed, maintained, and transformed through writing practices, making literary work an identity-creating act.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's poetry, prose, theological arguments, and personal letters were not merely expressions of a pre-existing identity; they were actively constructing her identity in the world. This concept recognizes writing as a generative practice—not simply representation but creation. Through writing, individuals claim presence, assert authority, document experience, and participate in cultural discourse. Textual identity work encompasses diverse practices: journaling, letter-writing, memoir, poetry, testimony, blogging, social media. The act of committing experience to text transforms it, gives it permanence, and positions oneself as a speaker and witness. Across cultures, writing becomes particularly significant for those whose voices are marginalized or silenced. Literacy and access to publication become identity-empowering tools. This concept validates writing as serious identity work, not mere self-expression. It explains why censoring someone's writing constitutes an identity attack. For individuals navigating multiple cultural contexts, textual practices can preserve identity, create new identities, or negotiate between different self-presentations. Writing becomes a technology for managing identity complexity and claiming the right to authorship of one's own life narrative.

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Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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