The onset of the JWST-era provides a much-improved opportunity to characterize the resolved structure of early star forming systems. Previous observations of 𝑧 6 galaxies with Spitzer revealed the presence of old stars and luminous HII regions (via [OIII]+H𝛽 emission), but the poor resolution stunted our ability to map the location of these components with respect to the star forming regions identified in the rest-UV. As such, it has long been unclear whether the old stars are situated in a separate nuclear component, surrounded by the regions dominating the light in the rest-UV. In this paper, we investigate the internal structure of 12 of the most luminous and massive 𝑧 6 − 8 galaxies in the portion of the EGS field observed with recent JWST/NIRCam imaging. The systems appear clumpy in the rest-UV, with more than half of the light coming from 10 7 to 10 9 M star forming complexes that are 150 -480 pc in size. Multiple clumps are found in individual galaxies with separations of 0.3 to 4.3 kpc. The clumps tend to be dominated by young stars (median = 23 Myr), but we find large variations in the age of clumps within individual galaxies. The [OIII]+H𝛽 EW varies significantly across different clumps in galaxies (reflecting differences in stars and gas properties), but the HII regions largely track the UV-bright complexes. We do not find older (and redder) nuclear stellar components that were previously undetected or faint in the UV. Perhaps surprisingly, the rest-optical continuum is just as clumpy as the UV, with emission mostly dominated by the bright star forming complexes. The majority of the stellar mass in bright 6 < 𝑧 < 8 galaxies appears to be contained in the 150 pc-scale clumpy star forming complexes, reflecting the very active phase of assembly that is common in reionization-era galaxies.