The present article discusses critically the self-unfolding of the subject-author into personae who speak in the text. In addition, the article puts forward the category of individual “otherness”. “Otherness” is considered a manifestation of the characters (i.e. the various masks [= personae] which make up our personality, as they interact). The study focuses on the relationship between discursive locus and the choice of a linguistic style. As the analysis unfolds, the paper discusses linguistic multiplicity needed for the self-unfolding of subjects, as they perform a variety of textual- discursive roles. In this way, it is attempted to apply the theory of internal polyglossia (the hypothesis of polyglossia operating within one’s own langua...