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Research Article

To feel and talk in a language of conflict: distinct emotional experience and expression of bilinguals among disadvantaged minority members

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Received 05 Nov 2021, Accepted 18 May 2022, Published online: 26 May 2022
 

ABSTRACT

Research conducted on emotionality in bilinguals suggests that language use modulates emotional expression. The current study examines bilingual disadvantaged minority members’ emotional experience and expression as shaped by the group relations in a conflict area. We hypothesised that, in general, greater emotionality will be found in one’s native language. Moreover, since the second language is imposed and acquired in a negative context, there may be differential effects on negative and positive language. A novel ecological paradigm was used: Twenty-eight Palestinian citizens of Israel were videotaped while recounting emotional stories in both Arabic (L1) and Hebrew (L2), resulting in 212 videos. Two studies followed: In Study 1 we compared participants’ emotional ratings (1a) and analyzed the content of emotional expression (1b). In Study 2, American participants rated emotional expressiveness. In Study 1, an interaction effect was found between language and valence, with less positive emotions and expressions in L2. In Study 2, a general difference in expressiveness was found in favour of L1. These studies show an effect of power disparities on the emotional load of the second language, thus highlighting the emotional costs of using a second language acquired in a conflict area.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Tamir Haj-Yahia, Yael Tal and Sharon Livneh for their dedicated work coding emotional and cognitive terms. This research was supported by a grant from the Azrieli Foundation to AP. NK was funded by a fellowship from the Israeli Council for Higher Education.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Azrieli Foundation faculty fellowship to AP.

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