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Between the Fantastic and the Archetypal: A Todorovian and Jungian Reading of George Sand’s The Drac

Ambiguity, Desire, Dreams, Fantastic, Folklore, George Sand, Identity, Jungian Analysis, Le Drac, Supernatural, Tzvetan Todorov 0 comments

 

Francine and The Drac
AI-generated picture by Jonathan Acuña Solano in June 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     I was introduced to the works of George Sand by my friend Dr. Alberto Delgado, professor at the University of Costa Rica (UCR). During a pleasant afternoon conversation over a cup of tea, he spoke enthusiastically about his literary research on this remarkable French author and, in particular, about her fascinating dramatic work Le Drac. As he explained some of his findings, he also shared the theoretical framework he had chosen to examine the play, namely Tzvetan Todorov’s concept of the fantastic. His comments drew my attention to the ways in which Todorov’s principles allow readers and spectators to engage with a narrative that constantly oscillates between the ordinary and the supernatural, creating a sense of hesitation that makes the story feel surprisingly real despite its marvelous elements.

     Our conversation inspired me to read Le Drac with greater attention. What initially appeared to be a simple folkloric tale soon revealed itself as a rich and multilayered narrative populated by dreams, illusions, doubles, supernatural interventions, and profound emotional conflicts. The character of the Drac, in particular, emerged as one of the most intriguing figures in the play. He is neither entirely spirit nor entirely human, neither wholly benevolent nor completely malevolent. Instead, he occupies an unstable space between desire and deception, innocence and corruption, freedom and obsession.

     While Todorov’s theory provides a valuable framework for understanding the fantastic dimension of the play, I soon became convinced that the Drac also invites interpretation from a psychoanalytic perspective. His manipulation of dreams, his unstable identity, his desire for Francine, and his attempts to reshape reality according to his wishes suggest a character whose actions resonate with deeper psychological structures. For this reason, it seems worthwhile to explore the Drac not only through the lens of the fantastic but also through the insights of Carl Jung. Such an approach may illuminate the character’s relationship with the trickster’s motif.

     The following essay therefore seeks to examine Le Drac primarily through Todorov’s theory of the fantastic while also considering how a Jungian reading can enrich our understanding of one of George Sand’s most enigmatic and psychologically compelling characters.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Between the Fantastic and the Archetypal: A Todorovian and Jungian Reading of George Sand’s The Drac

 

Abstract

This essay examines George Sand’s Le Drac through the theoretical framework of Tzvetan Todorov’s concept of the fantastic while also considering the interpretive possibilities offered by Jungian archetypes. The study explores how Sand constructs a narrative world characterized by hesitation, ambiguity, dream imagery, supernatural interventions, and unstable identities. Particular attention is given to the character of the Drac, whose existence oscillates between the human and the supernatural, creating the uncertainty that Todorov identifies as the defining feature of fantastic literature. At the same time, the essay investigates how the Drac’s longing for Francine, his manipulation of appearances, and his inability to attain the object of his desire reflect Lacanian notions of lack, desire, and illusion. By combining literary and psychoanalytic approaches, this study argues that Le Drac transcends its folkloric origins and becomes a sophisticated exploration of human consciousness, emotional longing, and the fragile boundaries between reality and imagination. Ultimately, the play demonstrates how the fantastic can serve as a powerful vehicle for examining the psychological forces that shape human experience.

Keywords:

Fantastic, Desire, Folklore, Ambiguity, Identity, Jungian Analysis, Supernatural, Dreams, Le Drac, George Sand, Tzvetan Todorov

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo analiza Le Drac de George Sand a partir del marco teórico de lo fantástico propuesto por Tzvetan Todorov y de la teoría de los arquetipos desarrollada por Carl Jung, con especial atención al arquetipo del Trickster. El estudio explora cómo Sand construye un universo narrativo caracterizado por la vacilación, la ambigüedad, las imágenes oníricas, las intervenciones sobrenaturales y las identidades inestables. Se presta especial atención al personaje del Drac, cuya existencia oscila entre lo humano y lo sobrenatural, produciendo la incertidumbre que Todorov considera esencial para la literatura fantástica. Asimismo, se examina cómo el Drac encarna numerosas características asociadas con el arquetipo jungiano del Trickster, entre ellas la metamorfosis, el engaño, la alteración del orden social y la revelación de verdades ocultas. Al combinar perspectivas literarias y psicológicas, este trabajo sostiene que Le Drac trasciende sus orígenes folclóricos para convertirse en una profunda exploración del deseo humano, la identidad, la transformación y los límites entre la realidad y la imaginación. En última instancia, la obra de George Sand demuestra cómo lo fantástico y lo arquetípico pueden converger para crear un personaje de notable riqueza literaria y psicológica.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio analisa Le Drac, de George Sand, a partir da teoria do fantástico desenvolvida por Tzvetan Todorov e da teoria dos arquétipos de Carl Jung, com especial atenção ao arquétipo do Trickster. O estudo investiga como Sand constrói um universo narrativo marcado pela hesitação, pela ambiguidade, pelas imagens oníricas, pelas intervenções sobrenaturais e pelas identidades instáveis. Particular atenção é dada à personagem do Drac, cuja existência oscila entre o humano e o sobrenatural, produzindo a incerteza que Todorov identifica como elemento fundamental da literatura fantástica. Além disso, o ensaio examina como o Drac incorpora diversas características associadas ao arquétipo junguiano do Trickster, incluindo a metamorfose, o engano, a perturbação da ordem social e a revelação de verdades ocultas. Ao combinar abordagens literárias e psicológicas, este estudo argumenta que Le Drac transcende suas origens folclóricas e se transforma em uma sofisticada exploração do desejo humano, da identidade, da transformação e das fronteiras entre realidade e imaginação. Em última análise, a peça de George Sand demonstra como o fantástico e o arquétipo podem convergir para criar uma personagem de duradoura relevância literária e psicológica.

 


Introduction

The nineteenth century witnessed the flourishing of literary forms that explored the unstable boundaries between “reality” and “the supernatural.” Among these forms, the fantastic emerged as a particularly fertile mode through which authors could interrogate uncertainty, desire, fear, and the fragility of human perception. George Sand, often remembered primarily for her social novels and pastoral narratives, also ventured into the realm of the fantastic in The Drac (1861), a dramatic reverie deeply rooted in folklore, dream imagery, and psychological ambiguity. Sand’s play presents the story of a supernatural sea spirit who assumes human form as a young boy and who falls in love with a female character by the name Francine, only to become entangled in jealousy, deception, and emotional suffering. Through this metamorphosis, Sand constructs a narrative that oscillates between enchantment and terror, while simultaneously examining the instability of identity and desire.

The complexity of The Drac’s plot and characters becomes especially evident when approached through the theoretical framework proposed by Tzvetan Todorov in The Fantastic: A Structural Approach to a Literary Genre. Todorov (1975) defines the fantastic as the moment of hesitation experienced by a character and the reader when confronted with apparently supernatural events that resist immediate rational explanation. In George Sand’s play, the Drac’s existence, his transformations, prophetic visions, and manipulations generate precisely this hesitation. Although the play openly incorporates folkloric material, Sand avoids reducing the supernatural to either pure illusion or complete certainty. Instead, she creates a liminal space in which psychological experience, dream states, folklore, and supernatural possibility coexist uneasily.

At the same time, the Drac may also be interpreted through the lens of Carl Jung’s theory of archetypes, particularly the Trickster archetype. In Jungian psychology, the Trickster represents instability, transformation, deception, boundary-crossing, and the chaotic energies that disturb fixed social and psychological structures. The Drac embodies these characteristics repeatedly throughout the play. As a supernatural being, he manipulates perception, creates illusions, impersonates identities, alters written language, and exploits emotional people’s vulnerabilities. Yet he is not merely malicious. Sand portrays him as a tragic and divided being whose contact with humanity generates emotional awakening alongside moral corruption. His actions reveal both the destructive and revelatory dimensions of the Trickster figure.

This essay argues that The Drac functions simultaneously as a fantastic narrative in Todorovian terms and as a profound dramatization of the Jungian Trickster archetype. Through ambiguity, dream logic, metamorphosis, and psychological destabilization, Sand transforms the folkloric Drac into a figure who embodies both the uncertainty central to the fantastic and the disruptive psychological force associated with the Trickster. Ultimately, the play reveals how supernatural narratives may operate not only as folklore or fantasy, but also as symbolic explorations of human consciousness, desire, and identity.

The Fantastic and the Logic of Hesitation

According to Todorov (1975), the fantastic exists in the hesitation between natural and supernatural explanations. He writes that “the fantastic occupies the duration of this uncertainty” (Todorov, 1978, p. 25). The reader must remain uncertain whether the events presented belong to reality, hallucination, illusion, or genuine supernatural intervention. Once the uncertainty is resolved, the narrative shifts either toward the marvelous or the uncanny. Sand’s The Drac carefully preserves this ambiguity throughout much of the text.

The play begins with an atmosphere already immersed in folk superstition and uncertainty. André, Francine’s father, believes in the Drac as a supernatural sea spirit capable of influencing fishing, weather, and fortune. Francine, the female character the Drac falls in love with, however, represents skepticism and rational hesitation. She mocks her father’s offerings to the Drac:

“If the Drac is a spirit—a will-o’-the-wisp—he can’t eat hazelnuts!”

This tension between belief and disbelief establishes the central Todorovian structure of hesitation. Francine neither fully accepts nor completely dismisses the supernatural. Her position mirrors that of the reader, who is invited to question whether the Drac truly exists or whether the events derive from psychological projection, folklore, and emotional instability.

George Sand intensifies this uncertainty through dream states and altered consciousness of the characters in the story. Francine burns the mysterious “Drac herb” while imagining the possibility of supernatural visitation. Almost immediately afterward, the Drac appears as a young boy whom the reader discovers had drowned at the beginning of the play. The transition is ambiguous enough to invite multiple interpretations. Did Francine truly summon a supernatural being, or is the appearance merely theatrical coincidence? Todorov emphasizes that the fantastic depends upon precisely this kind of interpretive instability.

The Drac himself further complicates matters because he experiences uncertainty regarding his own new condition as a human being. After assuming the form of Nicolas, he states:

“Cruel metamorphosis! I already suffer from being thus!…”

The supernatural event is treated not as unquestioned reality, but as existential confusion for the Drac in the body of Nicolas. The Drac does not fully understand his transformation or its psychological consequences. He becomes trapped between spirit and humanity, certainty and confusion. Such liminality preserves the fantastic atmosphere because the supernatural remains unstable even to the supernatural being himself.

Dreams also become vehicles of ambiguity. The Drac’s prophetic sleep sequences reveal Bernard’s past, present, and future. Francine becomes convinced of supernatural insight because the Drac reveals details he should not know:

“I saw it all… in a dream.”

Yet Sand continually frames these revelations within dream logic rather than objective certainty. Dreams occupy a threshold state between reality and illusion, making them ideal instruments for the fantastic. As Todorov (1975) argues, the fantastic often emerges through disturbances of perception and cognition rather than direct supernatural confirmation.

Moreover, the appearance of Bernard’s specter in Act II deepens the uncertainty surrounding reality itself. The specter identifies itself not as Bernard, but as “his image, his double, his specter.” The concept of the double is central to fantastic literature because it destabilizes identity and challenges empirical certainty. Sand explicitly references this tradition in the Preface, where she mentions “another spirit, more troubling and more sinister, which everywhere is known as the double.”

The false Bernard becomes a manifestation of psychological and supernatural uncertainty simultaneously. Francine recognizes Bernard physically, yet senses that something is profoundly wrong:

“Your face has changed… You are pale—and you bring good news with a cruel, gloomy look.”

This disjunction between appearance and essence exemplifies the fantastic destabilization of identity. Sand invites readers to question not only what is real, but whether human perception itself can reliably distinguish truth from illusion.

The Drac as Jungian Trickster

While Todorov’s framework explains the structural ambiguity of the play, Jungian psychology illuminates the symbolic and psychological dimensions of the Drac as character. In Jung’s writings, the Trickster archetype embodies contradiction, disorder, transformation, and the primitive forces lurking beneath civilization. Jung (1968) describes the Trickster as a figure associated with “deceit, shape-shifting, and disruption of ordinary consciousness” (p. 255). The Drac exhibits all these qualities throughout Sand’s narrative.

Most obviously, the Drac is a shapeshifter. He assumes Nicolas’s body after the child’s death:

“Take the face, take the body of this child; take the life that has been violently taken from him—and go converse with men!”

Shape-shifting is fundamental to Trickster figures across mythological traditions. The Trickster destabilizes fixed identity categories and exposes the artificiality of social boundaries. By becoming human, the Drac enters a liminal state that allows him to cross between worlds: spirit and human, dream and reality, innocence and corruption.

The Drac also embodies the Trickster’s deceptive relationship with language and truth. He is able to manipulate conversations, create false impressions, and alter meaning repeatedly. One of the clearest examples occurs when he persuades Bernard to write “I forget you,” only to magically transform the inscription into “I despise you.” Language itself becomes unstable under the Drac’s influence.

This manipulation of signs reflects the Trickster’s role as corrupter of communication and mediator of chaos. The Drac exploits misunderstandings rather than direct violence. His power lies in distortion, illusion, and emotional confusion. Jungian critics frequently observe that the Trickster destabilizes rational systems by exposing their fragility. The Drac accomplishes this through psychological manipulation rather than brute force.

Furthermore, the Drac represents the eruption of repressed emotional energies. Initially, he claims to love Francine with spiritual purity:

“I loved you with a pure love, Francine—your soul was my sister’s.”

Yet human embodiment introduces jealousy, rage, and possessiveness:

“I have felt a strange fire—jealousy, anger, hatred, passion!”

The Trickster archetype often symbolizes instinctual drives that civilized consciousness attempts to repress. The Drac’s tragedy lies in his inability to reconcile spiritual freedom with human emotional complexity. His transformation becomes not merely physical, but psychological and moral.

Jung (1968) argues that Trickster figures frequently occupy morally ambiguous positions. They are neither entirely evil nor entirely benevolent. The Drac exemplifies this ambiguity. He genuinely loves Francine and experiences profound suffering. His monologues reveal existential despair rather than pure villainy:

“Weak and small, abandoned by his brethren, hated by men—he is subject to a fatal passion!”

This suffering humanizes him while preserving his destructive potential. Sand avoids creating a simplistic demonic antagonist. Instead, the Drac becomes a fragmented consciousness torn between supernatural freedom and human limitation.

The Drac also functions as a destabilizer of social order, another characteristic associated with Trickster figures. He manipulates André through illusions of wealth, exploiting greed and vanity. He destabilizes Francine and Bernard’s reconciliation through deception and psychological interference. He conjures specters, confuses perception, and encourages despair. Wherever the Drac intervenes, social harmony deteriorates.

At the same time, the Trickster archetype often exposes hidden truths. The Drac reveals suppressed fears, insecurities, and desires within the human characters. Bernard’s guilt, André’s greed, and Francine’s emotional vulnerability emerge more clearly under supernatural pressure. Thus, the Drac functions simultaneously as corrupter and revealer.

Dreams, Doubles, and Psychological Fragmentation

One of the most significant intersections between Todorovian and Jungian approaches in this play narrative appears in George Sand’s use of dreams and doubles. Both theories recognize that fractured identity and unstable perception generate profound psychological disturbance. The motif of the double has a long tradition within fantastic literature. Critics such as Sigmund Freud (2003) associated doubles with the uncanny, particularly in relation to repressed fears and divided consciousness. In The Drac, the “false Bernard” represents not merely a magical imitation, but a distorted reflection of Bernard’s past self. The specter amplifies Bernard’s former cruelty, selfishness, and violence. It is for this reason that Francine remarks:

“You are worse than before—for even in your worst days, you would never have dared say such things!”

The “false Bernard” externalizes the moral corruption Bernard fears within himself. Thus, it can be also stated that the supernatural double functions psychologically as an embodiment of guilt and unresolved identity.

Similarly, the Drac himself becomes a divided being. He repeatedly expresses confusion regarding his nature in the body of a human:

“How many things I no longer know! How many feelings I can no longer understand!”

This fragmentation aligns closely with Jungian notions of psychic division. The Drac loses coherence as he absorbs human emotions and does not know how to cope with them. His supernatural identity dissolves into contradiction, making him increasingly unstable and losing control of his feelings.

Dream states reinforce this instability. Characters repeatedly experience blurred boundaries between waking and dreaming. Francine’s visions, André’s greed-induced trance, and Bernard’s despair all occur within psychologically altered states. The Drac himself governs dreams, calling himself “the king of dreams—the Drac with azure wings!” (Sand, 2026).

Dreams in the play function not merely as narrative devices to develop the plot, but as symbolic spaces where unconscious fears and desires manifest visibly. Jung viewed dreams as expressions of archetypal energies emerging from the unconscious mind. Sand’s use of dream imagery therefore complements the Jungian reading of the Drac as archetypal disruptor. At the same time, dreams preserve Todorovian hesitation because they destabilize epistemological certainty. If supernatural experiences occur within dreams, can they be trusted? Sand never provides definitive answers to this question. Instead, she allows dreams and waking life to contaminate one another continuously producing some kind of uncertainty in the mind of the reader of the text or the viewer of the drama being performed.

Folklore, Nature, and the Fantastic Sublime

Sand’s (2026) Preface emphasizes the folkloric origins of the Drac legend and situates the narrative within a maritime landscape of isolation, danger, and sublimity. The setting itself contributes significantly to the fantastic atmosphere. The coastal environment appears uncanny and almost supernatural even before the Drac emerges. Sand describes the reefs as “an army of livid specters” and emphasizes the terrifying beauty of the sea. Nature becomes psychologically charged, reflecting both Romantic aesthetics and fantastic uncertainty.

This emphasis on landscape aligns George Sand with Romantic traditions associated with authors such as E. T. A. Hoffmann and Charles Nodier, both of whom linked the fantastic to emotional and perceptual instability. The natural world in The Drac is never entirely separable from supernatural possibility. Moreover, Sand explicitly associates folklore with collective imagination:

“The fantastic element is still one of the many facets of the popular imagination.”

This statement reveals Sand’s awareness that the fantastic emerges culturally as much as individually. The Drac exists within communal belief systems, oral traditions, and emotional experience. Consequently, the supernatural cannot be dismissed easily because it reflects shared symbolic structures.

Jungian theory similarly emphasizes the collective dimension of archetypes. The Trickster is not merely an individual psychological phenomenon, but a recurring symbolic pattern embedded within cultural narratives across civilizations. Sand’s Drac therefore participates in both local folklore and universal archetypal symbolism.

Conclusion

George Sand’s The Drac occupies a fascinating position within nineteenth-century fantastic literature because it intertwines folklore, psychological conflict, dream imagery, and supernatural ambiguity into a profoundly symbolic narrative. Through the theoretical perspectives of Tzvetan Todorov and Carl Jung, the play reveals remarkable complexity beneath its seemingly simple folkloric premise.

From a Todorovian perspective, The Drac sustains the hesitation essential to the fantastic through ambiguity, dream states, doubles, and unstable perception. Sand avoids fully resolving whether the supernatural events in the plot should be interpreted literally, psychologically, or symbolically. Instead, she preserves uncertainty as the narrative’s central aesthetic experience. Characters and readers alike become trapped within a liminal space where reality and illusion overlap continuously.

Simultaneously, the Drac functions as a powerful embodiment of the Jungian Trickster archetype. Through shapeshifting, deception, emotional manipulation, and disruption of social order, he destabilizes both external reality and internal consciousness. Yet Sand presents him not merely as a malicious spirit, but as a tragic figure transformed and corrupted by human passion. His suffering reveals the psychological dangers inherent in desire, jealousy, and identity fragmentation.

The intersection of the fantastic and the archetypal ultimately gives The Drac its enduring richness. Sand transforms a regional sea spirit into a universal symbolic figure who embodies uncertainty, emotional chaos, and the instability of the self. The play suggests that the supernatural may operate less as an external force than as an expression of hidden psychological realities. In doing so, Sand anticipates later psychological approaches to fantastic literature and demonstrates how folklore can become a vehicle for profound explorations of consciousness and human desire.

San José, Costa Rica

Friday, June 12, 2026

 

📚 References

Freud, Sigmund. (2003). The uncanny (D. McLintock, Trans.). Penguin Books. (Original work published 1919)

Jung, Carl. (1968). The archetypes and the collective unconscious (2nd ed., R. F. C. Hull, Trans.). Princeton University Press.

Sand, George. (1861/2026). The Drac: A fantastic reverie in three acts (Translated edition).

Todorov, Tzvetan. (1975). The fantastic: A structural approach to a literary genre (R. Howard, Trans.). Cornell University Press.


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Friday, June 12, 2026



Error Correction and Learner Anxiety in Communicative Classrooms: Balancing Feedback, Confidence, and Participation in ELT

Affective Filter, CLT, Communicative Language Teaching, Corrective Feedback, ELT, Learner Anxiety, Learner Confidence, Willingness to Communicate 0 comments

 

Corrective feedback
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in June 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Here I find myself once more reflecting on error correction and the profound impact it can have on language learners depending on how teachers administer it in the classroom. Throughout my teaching experience, I have witnessed how corrective feedback can either encourage learners to take communicative risks confidently or silence them through anxiety and fear of making mistakes. This delicate balance constantly reminds us that correction is not merely a technical teaching skill, but also an emotional and human act that directly influences participation, confidence, and classroom atmosphere. The scholars discussed in this essay helped me better understand that effective correction must support communication rather than interrupt it, creating spaces where learners feel safe enough to experiment with language while gradually improving their accuracy.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Error Correction and Learner Anxiety in Communicative Classrooms: Balancing Feedback, Confidence, and Participation in ELT

 

Abstract

Corrective feedback plays a fundamental role in second language development, yet its emotional consequences in communicative classrooms remain a significant pedagogical concern. This paper examines how error correction influences learner confidence, willingness to communicate, classroom participation, and the affective filter within English Language Teaching (ELT). Drawing on the work of Krashen, Dörnyei, and Oxford, the discussion explores how excessive, poorly timed, or publicly delivered correction may generate anxiety and inhibit communicative risk-taking. The paper also analyzes how communicative methodologies such as Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT) attempt to balance fluency and accuracy while preserving learner agency. Particular attention is given to the relationship between corrective feedback and learner identity, emphasizing that emotional safety is essential for meaningful participation and interlanguage development. Ultimately, the paper argues that correction should function not as punitive intervention but as supportive mediation that encourages learners to communicate with confidence while gradually refining linguistic accuracy.

Keywords:

Corrective Feedback, Learner Anxiety, Affective Filter, Willingness to Communicate, Learner Confidence, Communicative Language Teaching, CLT, ELT

 

 

Resumen

La retroalimentación correctiva desempeña un papel fundamental en el desarrollo de una segunda lengua; sin embargo, sus consecuencias emocionales en los entornos comunicativos continúan siendo una preocupación pedagógica significativa. Este artículo examina cómo la corrección de errores influye en la confianza del estudiante, su disposición para comunicarse, la participación en clase y el filtro afectivo dentro de la Enseñanza del Inglés como Lengua Extranjera (ELT). Basándose en los aportes de Krashen, Dörnyei y Oxford, la discusión explora cómo una corrección excesiva, mal temporizada o realizada públicamente puede generar ansiedad e inhibir la toma de riesgos comunicativos. El artículo también analiza cómo metodologías comunicativas como la Enseñanza Comunicativa de Lenguas (CLT) y la Enseñanza Basada en Tareas (TBLT) intentan equilibrar la fluidez y la precisión mientras preservan la autonomía del estudiante. Se presta especial atención a la relación entre la retroalimentación correctiva y la identidad del aprendiz, enfatizando que la seguridad emocional es esencial para la participación significativa y el desarrollo de la interlengua. En última instancia, el artículo sostiene que la corrección no debe funcionar como una intervención punitiva, sino como una mediación de apoyo que motive a los estudiantes a comunicarse con confianza mientras refinan gradualmente su precisión lingüística.

 

 

Resumo

O feedback corretivo desempenha um papel fundamental no desenvolvimento de uma segunda língua; entretanto, suas consequências emocionais em salas de aula comunicativas continuam sendo uma preocupação pedagógica significativa. Este artigo examina como a correção de erros influencia a confiança do aprendiz, sua disposição para se comunicar, a participação em sala de aula e o filtro afetivo no Ensino de Inglês como Língua Estrangeira (ELT). Com base nos estudos de Krashen, Dörnyei e Oxford, a discussão explora como uma correção excessiva, mal temporizada ou realizada publicamente pode gerar ansiedade e inibir a tomada de riscos comunicativos. O artigo também analisa como metodologias comunicativas, como o Ensino Comunicativo de Línguas (CLT) e o Ensino Baseado em Tarefas (TBLT), procuram equilibrar fluência e precisão enquanto preservam a autonomia do aprendiz. Atenção especial é dada à relação entre feedback corretivo e identidade do aprendiz, enfatizando que a segurança emocional é essencial para a participação significativa e o desenvolvimento da interlíngua. Em última análise, o artigo argumenta que a correção não deve funcionar como uma intervenção punitiva, mas como uma mediação de apoio que incentive os aprendizes a se comunicarem com confiança enquanto refinam gradualmente sua precisão linguística.

 


Introduction

Error correction has long occupied a central place in language pedagogy, particularly within English Language Teaching (ELT). However, corrective feedback is not merely a linguistic event; it is also an emotional and interpersonal experience that directly affects how learners perceive themselves as language users. In communicative classrooms, where participation and interaction are essential, the manner in which teachers correct learners can either promote confidence or generate anxiety that inhibits communication.

The emergence of communicative methodologies shifted attention away from perfect accuracy toward meaningful interaction. Nevertheless, language teachers continue to face a complex dilemma: how can errors be corrected without discouraging learners from speaking? This question becomes especially important when considering the emotional dimensions of second language acquisition (SLA).

Dr. Stephen Krashen’s Affective Filter Hypothesis remains particularly influential in this discussion. Krashen (1982) argues that “performers with high motivation and self-confidence, a good self-image, and a low level of anxiety are better equipped for success in second language acquisition” (p. 31). This perspective suggests that emotionally harmful correction may interfere with acquisition itself.

Similarly, Zoltán Dörnyei (2001) emphasizes the importance of motivational conditions in language learning, stating that “motivation provides the primary impetus to initiate L2 learning and later the driving force to sustain the long and often tedious learning process” (p. 117). Corrective practices that humiliate or silence learners may therefore weaken both motivation and participation.

This essay examines the emotional consequences of corrective feedback in communicative classrooms, exploring how correction influences learner confidence, willingness to communicate, and classroom identity.

Corrective Feedback Beyond Linguistic Accuracy

Corrective feedback for language learners is often discussed primarily in terms of grammar, pronunciation, or lexical accuracy. But is this all? Well, communicative approaches recognize that language learning is deeply connected to emotional engagement and social participation. Language learners are not merely processing linguistic forms being studied in a coursebook; they are negotiating identity, confidence, and belonging within the classroom community.

Within this line of thinking, Krashen (1982) famously argued that “the affective filter may act to prevent input from being used for language acquisition” (p. 31). When students’ anxiety levels increase, learners may avoid participation altogether, regardless of the quality of instruction. In this sense, emotionally damaging correction does not simply affect feelings; it affects acquisition opportunities.

Rebecca Oxford (1999) similarly highlights the emotional dimensions of language learning, explaining that “language learning is profoundly affected by the learner’s emotional states” (p. 60). Fear of correction may therefore reduce communicative risk-taking, which is essential for interlanguage development.

Learner Confidence and Willingness to Communicate

One of the clearest consequences of emotionally harmful correction is diminished willingness to communicate (WTC). In communicative language classrooms, learners must feel psychologically safe enough to experiment with language, make errors, and negotiate meaning with peers and their instructors. Dörnyei (2205) explains that “language learners’ self-confidence is closely linked to their willingness to communicate” (p. 210). Excessive interruption, public embarrassment, or sarcastic correction may cause learners to associate participation with failure rather than growth.

This issue of emotionally harmful correction becomes particularly visible among lower-proficiency learners (CEFR level A1). Students who are repeatedly interrupted during in-class oral communicative activities often begin reducing their contributions to avoid further correction. Over time, communicative avoidance may emerge as a protective mechanism not just against the instructor but class members who may laugh at their mistakes. Krashen’s theory helps explain this “Affective Filter” phenomenon. When anxiety rises, the affective filter blocks meaningful engagement with language input and output. Learners may still hear language, but they become emotionally unavailable for acquisition.

Communicative methodologies such as CLT and TBLT should prioritize fluency and participation during meaning-focused tasks. Errors should often be tolerated temporarily because preserving interaction is viewed as pedagogically more valuable than immediate accuracy. Correction is then done to help students reflect on what was produced as ill-forms that needs to be “corrected”.

When Does Correction Become Emotionally Harmful?

Correction becomes emotionally harmful when it shifts from supportive guidance to public evaluation of competence. This often occurs through:

·        

excessive interruption when the student is speaking,

·        

Overcorrection of learner’s utterances,

·        

humiliating tone coming from teachers and peers,

·        

public comparison of student performance to other peers, or

·        

correction detached from communicative purpose.

Oxford (1999) warns that “anxiety can undermine the learner’s attempts to communicate, resulting in reduced participation and lower achievement” (p. 62). In communicative classrooms, constant interruption may signal to learners that accuracy matters more than meaning, thereby discouraging spontaneous expression and participation.

From a pedagogical and psychological stance, public error correction can be especially damaging because it affects learner identity within the social space of the classroom. Language students may begin perceiving themselves as “bad language learners” rather than developing communicators in the target language. For this very reason, Dörnyei (2001) emphasizes that “teachers are significant motivational socializers” (p. 35). This means corrective feedback carries interpersonal weight beyond its linguistic function. Teachers do not merely correct language; they shape learners’ perceptions of themselves as capable communicators.

Public Correction and Learner Identity

As language teaching professional, it is imperative that we bear in mind that language learning is inherently vulnerable because communication exposes students’ gaps in their competence and mastery of the target language publicly. For many learners, speaking in a second language already involves fear of judgment. Public correction may intensify this vulnerability. It is at this juncture that Krashen (1982) suggests that low-anxiety environments are essential because learners acquire language more effectively when they feel secure. If correction repeatedly threatens a learner’s public image, classroom participation may decline radically.

In some Latin America educational cultures (and probably among many other cultures worldwide), public correction is normalized and even expected by language learners. However, communicative pedagogy increasingly recognizes that learners differ in emotional sensitivity, personality, and willingness to take risks. From Dörnyei’s (2001) insights into language teaching, it can be noted that “creating a pleasant and supportive classroom atmosphere is one of the basic motivational conditions” (p. 40). Teachers must therefore consider not only what is corrected but how correction affects classroom relationships.

Constructive alternatives include:

·        

delayed feedback,

·        

anonymous error boards,

·        

peer collaboration,

·        

reflective pauses, and

·        

private conferencing.

These approaches to error correction maintain attention to form while reducing public embarrassment for the learners.

Correcting Without Discouraging Communication

The challenge for communicative teachers is not eliminating correction but integrating it strategically within the class continuum and not randomly. Effective correction supports students’ interlanguage development without silencing learners and demotivating them to accomplish their language learning goals.

Within error correction, several principles emerge from SLA-informed communicative pedagogy:

1)     

Prioritize Meaning During Fluency Tasks: During communicative interaction, teachers may selectively ignore minor errors that do not impede comprehension.

2)     

Use Delayed Feedback: Post-task feedback sessions preserve communicative flow while creating opportunities for noticing and reflection.

3)     

Encourage Self-Correction: Prompts, clarification requests, and elicitation foster learner autonomy without overt criticism.

4)     

Normalize Error as Development: Teachers should frame errors as evidence of growth rather than failure.

Oxford (1999) argues that “students need encouragement to take risks in using the new language” (p. 64). Corrective practices should therefore reinforce learner agency rather than punish imperfection.

The Role of Communicative Methodologies

Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT) both emphasize interaction as the foundation of language development. Within these approaches, excessive correction is viewed as potentially disruptive to communicative goals.

Aspect

Emotionally Harmful Correction

Supportive Communicative Correction

Timing

Constant interruption

Selective or delayed

Tone

Evaluative or punitive

Encouraging and constructive

Focus

Perfection

Intelligibility and development

Learner impact

Anxiety and silence

Confidence and participation

Teacher role

Authority figure

Facilitator and mediator

This distinction reflects broader SLA principles emphasizing learner engagement, negotiation of meaning, and interlanguage growth.

Balancing Accuracy and Emotional Safety

One of the greatest misconceptions in communicative pedagogy is the idea that emotional safety requires abandoning correction altogether. In reality, communicative teaching seeks balance rather than permissiveness. This is because Dörnyei (2005) emphasizes that learners remain motivated when they perceive progress. Appropriate feedback contributes to this perception by helping learners refine their language gradually and meaningfully.

Similarly, Krashen’s framework does not advocate eliminating feedback but lowering unnecessary anxiety. Emotionally supportive correction creates conditions where learners remain open to input, interaction, and self-improvement. Ultimately, the goal is not error-free speech but confident participation combined with developmental language growth.

Conclusion

Corrective feedback influences far more than linguistic accuracy. In communicative classrooms, correction shapes learner confidence, willingness to communicate, classroom participation, and emotional engagement with language learning itself. As Krashen, Dörnyei, and Oxford demonstrate, emotionally harmful correction may raise anxiety and inhibit acquisition, while supportive feedback fosters communicative risk-taking and interlanguage development. Teachers must therefore approach correction not as punitive evaluation but as pedagogical mediation sensitive to learner psychology and classroom dynamics.

Communicative methodologies remind educators that language learning is fundamentally social and emotional. Learners do not develop proficiency merely by avoiding errors; they develop through meaningful participation in environments where errors are treated as natural stages of growth and development. Effective correction, then, is not the correction that silences learners, it is the correction that helps them continue speaking.

San José, Costa Rica

Sunday, June 6, 2026


 

📚 References

Dörnyei, Z. (2001). Motivational strategies in the language classroom. Cambridge University Press.

Dörnyei, Z. (2005). The psychology of the language learner: Individual differences in second language acquisition. Lawrence Erlbaum.

Krashen, S. D. (1982). Principles and practice in second language acquisition. Pergamon Press. https://www.sdkrashen.com/content/books/principles_and_practice.pdf

Oxford, R. L. (1999). Anxiety and the language learner: New insights. In J. Arnold (Ed.), Affect in language learning (pp. 58–67). Cambridge University Press.

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Error Correction and Learner Anxiety in Communicative Classrooms by Jonathan Acuña



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Sunday, June 07, 2026


Location: San José, Curridabat, Freses, Costa Rica

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