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Racism in English Language Teaching? Autobiographical Narratives of Black English Language Teachers in Brazil1 1 Many thanks to the professor Lynn Mário Trindade de Meneses e Souza for his careful reading and feedback to several drafts of this article. I also thank the Coordination for Higher Education Staff Development (Capes) for providing a post-graduate grant, which consisted as support to this work (n.000).

Racismo no ensino de língua inglesa? Narrativas autobiográficas de professores negros de língua inglesa no Brasil

ABSTRACT

A hundred thirty years after the abolition of slavery and post-slave trade in Brazil, Black people remain the minority amongst teachers in English courses of private and public schools. This situation is tagged in their professional situation insofar as an aftermath of racism and coloniality are concerned, as I shall argue here. In this study, I seek to examine the ways race can be negatively or positively expanded in the performance of the identities of Black English language teachers, framing themselves as either resistant identities in/through language (using the language as a strategy to resist) or resistant identities to language (negating themselves as capable speakers or teachers).

KEYWORDS:
slavery; black people; black English teachers

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