'Bread Earning Saturated with Humiliation': 'اللقمة من هناك مغمسة بالذل' Linguistic Citizenship as Acts of Love and Sumud among Palestinian English Teachers at Jewish Israeli Schools

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Bibliographic Details
Title: 'Bread Earning Saturated with Humiliation': 'اللقمة من هناك مغمسة بالذل' Linguistic Citizenship as Acts of Love and Sumud among Palestinian English Teachers at Jewish Israeli Schools
Language: English
Authors: Muzna Awayed-Bishara (ORCID 0000-0003-4092-3582)
Source: TESOL Quarterly. 2026 60(1):S53-S78.
Availability: Wiley. Available from: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030. Tel: 800-835-6770; e-mail: cs-journals@wiley.com; Web site: https://www.wiley.com/en-us
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 26
Publication Date: 2026
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Arabs, Language Teachers, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language), Jews, Institutional Characteristics, Trauma, Trauma Informed Approach, Politics of Education, Colonialism, Resistance (Psychology), Human Dignity, Professionalism, Humanism, War, Freedom of Speech, Censorship, Ethics, Language Usage, Citizenship
Geographic Terms: Israel
DOI: 10.1002/tesq.70091
ISSN: 0039-8322
1545-7249
Abstract: This paper examines how Palestinian English teachers (PETs) working at Jewish-Israeli schools navigate trauma in an educational space that both requires and negates them. Driven by labor market demands rather than efforts at educational integration, PETs operate under constant affective and political tension, forced to comply with colonial measures of silencing and surveillance while struggling to assert their dignity as Palestinians, professionalism as educators, and humanity in a securitized space. This situation has intensified since the outbreak of war on Gaza following the Hamas attacks on Israel in October 2023, reflecting the political persecution and severe crackdowns on freedoms of expression and assembly faced by the general Palestinian public in Israel. In light of escalating repression and silencing, this paper examines how PETs navigate erasure and surveillance while cultivating spaces of love, ethical relations, and political presence in their classrooms by drawing on Stroud's notion of linguistic citizenship and its intersection with love and sumud (Arabic for steadfastness) as Southern decolonial acts. Drawing on interview data with six Palestinian English teachers working at Jewish-Israeli schools, I illustrate how English language teaching is at the nexus of affective-discursive trauma shaped by structural conditions of political, existential, and economic subjugation.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2026
Accession Number: EJ1508839
Database: ERIC
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