Applied Research on English Language (Apr 2023)

‎“I Don’t Like Working Hard to Materialize Another Person’s Dreams”: ‎The Emotion Labor and Identity Dilemma of a Novice Iranian Female ‎EFL Teacher at Private Language Institutes

  • Yasser Aminifard ‎,
  • Rahman Sahragard ‎,
  • Luis Pentón Herrera ‎

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22108/are.2023.137256.2070
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
pp. 175 – 200

Abstract

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Emotion labor is defined as any conflict between institutional demands and teachers’ professional beliefs and preferences. Engaging in emotion labor is an inevitable aspect of becoming a language teacher. Scholars agree that language teacher agency and identity are closely tied to emotion labor. This fact particularly looms large for novice language teachers, who tend to perceive contradictions between what they imagine prior to entering the profession and what they actually experience in their teaching contexts. This case study applied activity theory (Engeström, 2015) and Gee’s (2000) identity framework to explore how the emotion labor experienced by a novice Iranian female teacher of English as a foreign language (EFL) over a five-year career period at three private language institutes affected her language teacher agency and identity. The findings, obtained from class observations and semi-structured interviews, highlight two major sources of emotion labor: 1) profit-oriented policy, and 2) performance-constraining factors within the institute, which caused the participant to contemplate quitting her job. Implications and further research are discussed in line with the interplay among emotion labor, language teacher identity, and well-being.

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