AUB ScholarWorks

English as Capital vs. Language as Cultural: An Autoethnography of an Iranian Writer

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Amiri, Maryam
dc.date.accessioned 2025-06-10T11:44:47Z
dc.date.available 2025-06-10T11:44:47Z
dc.date.issued 2025-05
dc.identifier.citation Amiri, M. (2025). English as capital vs language as cultural: An authoethnography of an Iranian writer. MENA Writing Studies Journal, 1(1), 65-73.
dc.identifier.isbn 978-614-492-020-6
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10938/34990
dc.description MENA Writing Studies Journal, vol. 1.1, Spring 2025, pp. 65-73
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (pages 72-73)
dc.description.abstract Scholarship on linguistic imperialism has explained the dominance resulting from structural and cultural inequalities that put English language and culture above any other (Phillipson, 1992). We can enrich the macro-level scholarship on this subject by listening to the voices and complex experiences of individuals who are affected by these histories of linguistic imperialism. To present more nuanced and situated experiences, I narrate and analyze my own English writing journey as an Iranian writer who learned English in Iran and is now a PhD student in Composition and Rhetoric in the U.S., to trace the relationship between the ideologies of English as capital and language as cultural. My autoethnography shows that the spread of English is not inherently good or bad, but how it impacts its users depends on the way it gets appraised against other languages. I consider culturally sustaining pedagogy as an affirmative possibility, but also, my case shows that culturally sustaining pedagogies can be complicated in contexts where there are conflicting cultural values. I hope my multilayered experience in various contexts will induce productive questions that will lead to a more capacious view of language and more effective and inclusive writing pedagogies.
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.relation.ispartof MENA Writing Studies Journal
dc.subject.lcsh Transnational education
dc.subject.lcsh Authors, Iranian
dc.subject.lcsh Writing
dc.subject.lcsh English language--Study and teaching--Foreign speakers
dc.title English as Capital vs. Language as Cultural: An Autoethnography of an Iranian Writer
dc.type Article
dc.subject.keywords Language learning
dc.subject.keywords Writing studies
dc.subject.keywords Linguistic imperialism


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search AUB ScholarWorks


Browse

My Account