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Maternal Sacrifice and Social Illusion: Plot, Character, and Symbolism in José de Alencar’s Mãe

Brazilian Literature, Brazilian Romanticism, Ideology, José de Alencar, Latin American Literature, Literary Analysis, Mãe, Melodrama, Motherhood, Slavery in Brazil 0 comments

 

Symbolic layers of maternal sacrifice
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in January 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Mãe was my fifth book read entirely in Portuguese, and it came as a pleasant and somewhat unexpected confirmation that my proficiency in this language is more solid than I had initially assumed, perhaps aided by its proximity to Spanish, my mother tongue. Having worked as a literature professor at one stage of my professional life, and being, above all, an avid reader, I felt compelled to venture into new and fertile territory for my intellectual curiosity: Brazilian literature.

     In Costa Rica, access to Brazilian literary works is still limited, often reduced to a narrow and repetitive exposure, most notably to Paulo Coelho, while the richness and diversity of Brazil’s literary tradition remain largely unexplored. Engaging with José de Alencar’s ars literaria has therefore allowed me to expand my Latin American literary horizon and to revisit, from a different cultural angle, themes that are both historically situated and ethically enduring.

     Reading Mãe has been an exercise not only in linguistic growth but also in critical re-engagement with nineteenth-century social structures, narrative strategies, and moral dilemmas that continue to resonate today. This essay emerges from that encounter, as both a personal milestone in my reading journey and an academic reflection on Alencar’s dramatic exploration of motherhood, silence, and social illusion.


Maternal Sacrifice and Social Illusion: Plot, Character, and Symbolism in José de Alencar’s Mãe

 

Abstract

This essay analyzes José de Alencar’s theatrical play Mãe (1860) through a close examination of its plot structure, character construction, and symbolic framework. Drawing on theories of Romantic melodrama and realist social critique, the study explores how Alencar dramatizes maternal sacrifice within a rigidly stratified, slaveholding society. Central attention is given to Joana, an enslaved woman whose silenced motherhood enables her son’s social mobility, as well as to Jorge and the secondary characters who function as ideological agents sustaining social illusion. By situating Mãe within nineteenth-century Brazilian literary and social contexts, the essay argues that Alencar transforms private suffering into a collective moral indictment, exposing the ethical contradictions underlying respectability, lineage, and institutionalized silence.

Keywords:

José de Alencar, Mãe, Brazilian Literature, Brazilian Romanticism, Latin American Literature, Melodrama, Motherhood, Slavery in Brazil, Ideology, Literary Analysis

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo analiza la obra teatral Mãe (1860) de José de Alencar a partir del estudio de su estructura argumental, la construcción de sus personajes y su dimensión simbólica. Desde una perspectiva que combina el melodrama romántico y la crítica social realista, se examina cómo Alencar representa el sacrificio materno en el contexto de una sociedad esclavista y jerárquicamente estratificada. El análisis se centra en Joana, una mujer esclavizada cuya maternidad silenciada garantiza la movilidad social de su hijo, así como en Jorge y los personajes secundarios que operan como agentes ideológicos del orden social. El ensayo sostiene que Mãe convierte el sufrimiento privado en una denuncia moral colectiva, revelando las contradicciones éticas que sostienen la respetabilidad social, la genealogía y el silencio institucionalizado.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio analisa a peça teatral Mãe (1860), de José de Alencar, a partir de sua estrutura narrativa, da construção das personagens e de seu valor simbólico. Com base em abordagens do melodrama romântico e da crítica social realista, o estudo examina como Alencar representa o sacrifício materno em uma sociedade escravocrata e rigidamente hierarquizada. O foco recai sobre Joana, uma mulher escravizada cuja maternidade silenciada possibilita a ascensão social do filho, bem como sobre Jorge e as personagens secundárias que atuam como agentes ideológicos da ordem social. Argumenta-se que Mãe transforma o sofrimento individual em uma denúncia moral coletiva, expondo as contradições éticas que sustentam a respeitabilidade, a linhagem e o silêncio social.

 


José de Alencar’s theatrical play Mãe (“Mother”) occupies a distinctive position within nineteenth-century Brazilian literature. While Alencar is frequently associated with Indianist novels and the project of national romanticism, Mãe reveals his engagement with social melodrama and moral realism, particularly in relation to family, class hierarchy, and slavery. First staged in 1860, the play dramatizes the tragic consequences of social prejudice through the figure of Joana, an enslaved woman who suppresses her maternal identity to preserve her son’s social status and future. Through its plot structure, symbolic characterization, and ideological tension, Mãe exposes the contradictions of a society of yesteryear that venerates motherhood while denying its humanity to enslaved women. This essay (my 518th post in Reflective Online Teaching) analyzes the plot, central and secondary characters, and symbolic framework of Mãe, drawing on Romantic melodrama and realist social critique to demonstrate how Alencar transforms private sacrifice into a collective moral indictment.

Plot Structure and Moral Progression

Alencar’s Mãe follows a melodramatic structure consistent with what Peter Brooks (1976) terms the “moral legibility” of melodrama, in which ethical conflict is heightened to render injustice visible. The plot centers on Jorge, a young man striving for social respectability, and Joana, his enslaved mother, whose maternity must remain hidden for him to circulate freely within a rigidly stratified society. The concealment of Joana’s identity functions as the play’s primary dramatic tension, shaping both its emotional trajectory and its ethical stakes.

The author delays the revelation of Joana’s maternity, allowing the audience to experience the cost of silence before its consequences emerge. This narrative strategy aligns with Antonio Candido’s (1975) observation that Alencar often privileges gradual moral exposure over sudden revelation though the spectator or the reader already knows the character’s internal drama. The climax of the play occurs not through confrontation but through erasure: Joana chooses death rather than disclosure, preserving her son’s social standing at the expense of her own existence. While this resolution conforms to Romantic tragedy, it simultaneously gestures toward realist critique. As Roberto Schwarz (2000) argues, Brazilian literary narratives of this period frequently expose how personal virtue is mobilized to stabilize unjust social structures.

Joana and the Symbolism of Silenced Motherhood

Joana is the ethical and symbolic core of Mãe. Although socially marginalized, this characters embodies the play’s highest moral value: unconditional maternal love. Her motherhood, however, is both biologically undeniable and socially inadmissible. This contradiction situates Joana within what Gilbert and Gubar (1979) describe as the literary tradition of silenced women whose virtue is expressed through self-negation rather than agency.

Symbolically, Joana represents the enslaved mother whose humanity must remain invisible for the social harmony of her son to persist. Alencar avoids portraying her as rebellious; instead, her dignity lies in endurance and restraint. This aligns with Romantic idealizations of moral purity, yet it also exposes their limits. As Alfredo Bosi (1992) notes, Alencar often elevates individual ethics while leaving oppressive systems intact, creating a dissonance between moral sentiment and social transformation. Joana’s death thus functions not as redemption but as indictment. Her disappearance confirms Roland Barthes’s (1972) notion of characters as cultural signs: Joana signifies the cost of maintaining social illusion.

Jorge and the Illusion of Merit

Jorge embodies the fragile ideal of social merit. Unlike Romantic heroes defined by moral autonomy, Jorge’s respectability depends on his ignorance regarding who his mother was or is. His social position is made possible by the suppression of his origins, revealing what Terry Eagleton (1996) describes as ideology’s capacity to conceal its own foundations. Jorge’s suffering upon learning the truth does not equal Joana’s loss; rather, it underscores the asymmetry of sacrifice within hierarchical systems.

Jorge’s trajectory illustrates Candido’s (1987) claim that Brazilian Romanticism often dramatizes personal conflicts that mirror collective moral failures people in different social sphere avoid discussing or making visible. His apparent mobility exposes the illusion of merit in a society structured by lineage and race. He does not actively oppress Joana, yet he benefits from her erasure, making him a passive participant in systemic injustice.

Secondary Characters as Ideological Agents

While Joana and Jorge anchor the emotional core of Mãe, secondary characters such as Dr. Lima, Peixoto, Sr. Gomes, and Elisa function as ideological agents who sustain the social order the tragedy depends upon and describes for the reader or drama viewer. Rather than serving as antagonists, they embody the mechanisms through which injustice is normalized in that period of history.

Dr. Lima represents institutional rationality and enlightened authority. Educated and compassionate, he recognizes suffering but never challenges its causes. His interventions are pragmatic rather than transformative, exemplifying what Eagleton (1996) identifies as bourgeois humanism: ethical concern without structural critique. Dr. Lima reassures the audience and the readers that the social system he is part of is reasonable and fair, even as it destroys Joana.

Peixoto, by contrast, symbolizes utilitarian adaptation. He understands the social rules governing legitimacy and navigates them opportunistically. His moral flexibility reveals how injustice persists not through cruelty but through convenience. Peixoto exposes the transactional logic underlying social survival in a slaveholding society.

Sr. Gomes embodies patriarchal law and the authority of appearances. His judgments are rooted in lineage, honor, and social legitimacy rather than ethical substance. He functions as a gatekeeper of respectability, illustrating why Joana’s truth must remain unspeakable. For Sr. Gomes, morality is genealogical, not humane. Sr. Gomes appears as a puppet of the enslaving system all the characters live in.

Elisa represents conditional love shaped by social conformity. While affectionate and sincere, her feelings for Jorge are constrained by class ideology. Elisa reveals how women may simultaneously suffer under and reinforce patriarchal norms. Her character demonstrates that even romantic affection operates within rigid social boundaries, reinforcing Lukács’s (1971) concept of “typical characters” whose private lives reflect broader social contradictions.

Together, these characters form an ideological chorus: Dr. Lima rationalizes, Peixoto negotiates, Sr. Gomes legitimizes, and Elisa normalizes. Joana’s death is not caused by a single villain but by a system in which everyone fulfills their role.

Maternal Sacrifice and Social Critique

The title Mãe foregrounds motherhood as both sacred and problematic. Alencar elevates maternal love while exposing how society denies full motherhood to enslaved women. This paradox aligns with Adrienne Rich’s (1976) distinction between motherhood as institution and motherhood as lived experience. Joana lives motherhood as devotion and loss, while society instrumentalizes it to preserve order.

Silence emerges as a central motif. Joana’s silence protects Jorge but annihilates her identity, suggesting that social harmony is achieved through moral erasure. The play thus transforms melodrama into critique, revealing the ethical cost of maintaining appearances.

Conclusion

Mãe stands as one of José de Alencar’s most ethically complex dramatic works. Through its melodramatic structure, symbolic characterization, and ideological tension, the play exposes the contradictions of nineteenth-century Brazilian society regarding slavery, class, and motherhood. Joana’s sacrifice reveals the human cost of social illusion, while Jorge and the secondary characters demonstrate how injustice is sustained through normalization rather than cruelty. Positioned between Romantic sentiment and realist critique, Mãe compels readers and audiences to confront the moral foundations of respectability itself.

San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, January 24, 2026


📚 References

Barthes, R. (1972). Mythologies. Hill and Wang.

Bosi, A. (1992). História concisa da literatura brasileira. Cultrix.
Brooks, P. (1976). The melodramatic imagination. Yale University Press.
Candido, A. (1975).
Formação da literatura brasileira. Martins Fontes.
Candido, A. (1987). Literature and society.
Edusp.
Eagleton, T. (1996). Literary theory: An introduction. Blackwell.
Gilbert, S. M., & Gubar, S. (1979). The madwoman in the attic. Yale University Press.
Lukács, G. (1971). The theory of the novel. MIT Press.
Rich, A. (1976). Of woman born. W. W. Norton.
Schwarz, R. (2000). Misplaced ideas. Verso.


Character Analysis of Mãe by José de Alencar

Character Analysis of Mãe by José de Alencar by Jonathan Acuña



Maternal Sacrifice and Social Illusion by Jonathan Acuña



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Saturday, January 24, 2026



Managing Group Dynamics and Mixed-Ability Classes in ELT: Theory-Informed Reflections from TeachingEnglish

British Council, Classroom Management, Communicative Language Teaching, Cooperative Learning, Group Work, Learner Diversity, Mixed-Ability Classes 0 comments

Collaboration and dynamics
AI-Generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in January 2026
 

Introductory Note to the Reader

     One of the most significant academic realizations this British Council course has prompted is a conceptual shift that, surprisingly, I had not fully articulated before: every English class we teach is, by nature, a mixed-ability class. While institutional frameworks and registration systems require us to categorize learners according to CEFR levels, such classifications can unintentionally mask the complex reality of learner diversity. Beyond proficiency bands, learners differ in cognitive processing, motivation, learning strategies, life experience, professional background, and affective factors that directly influence classroom interaction.

     This course has encouraged me to critically revisit long-held assumptions about group work, learner behavior, and classroom management. It has also reinforced the idea that effective teaching does not emerge from rigid standardization, but from a principled understanding of difference. The reflections presented in this essay stem from that realization and from an ongoing effort to reconcile theory, institutional expectations, and lived classroom practice.

Jonathan Acuña


Managing Group Dynamics and Mixed-Ability Classes in ELT: Theory-Informed Reflections from TeachingEnglish

 

Abstract

Group work and mixed-ability instruction are central to communicative language teaching (CLT), yet they remain among the most challenging aspects of classroom management in English language teaching (ELT). While collaborative learning promotes interaction, learner autonomy, and meaningful language use, it also generates tensions related to participation, conflict, learner behavior, and uneven contribution. This reflective academic essay draws on Module 1, Unit 3 of the British Council’s TeachingEnglish: Managing learners and resources course and integrates its practical recommendations with established ELT theory and the author’s professional experience. Drawing on scholars such as Harmer, Scrivener, Dörnyei, Johnson and Johnson, Tomlinson, and Vygotsky, the paper examines how principled task design, explicit role allocation, socio-affective awareness, and differentiated instruction can support effective group dynamics in mixed-ability classrooms. The discussion argues that challenges commonly associated with group work are not failures of collaborative learning, but inherent features of social interaction that, when managed thoughtfully, can foster deeper engagement and more inclusive learning environments.

Keywords:

Group Work, Mixed-Ability Classes, Classroom Management, Communicative Language Teaching, Learner Diversity, Cooperative Learning, British Council

 

 

Resumen

El trabajo en grupo y la enseñanza en clases de habilidad mixta son componentes fundamentales del enfoque comunicativo en la enseñanza del inglés; sin embargo, continúan representando algunos de los mayores desafíos en la gestión del aula. Aunque el aprendizaje colaborativo fomenta la interacción, la autonomía del estudiante y el uso significativo del lenguaje, también genera tensiones relacionadas con la participación desigual, el conflicto, el comportamiento del alumnado y la contribución desbalanceada. Este ensayo académico-reflexivo se basa en el Módulo 1, Unidad 3 del curso TeachingEnglish: Managing learners and resources del British Council e integra sus recomendaciones prácticas con teoría consolidada en ELT y la experiencia profesional del autor. A partir de aportes de Harmer, Scrivener, Dörnyei, Johnson y Johnson, Tomlinson y Vygotsky, se analiza cómo el diseño de tareas con principios claros, la asignación explícita de roles, la conciencia socio-afectiva y la diferenciación pedagógica pueden favorecer dinámicas grupales efectivas en contextos de habilidad mixta. El ensayo sostiene que los desafíos del trabajo colaborativo no constituyen fallas metodológicas, sino características inherentes del aprendizaje social que, bien gestionadas, pueden enriquecer el proceso educativo.

 

 

Resumo

O trabalho em grupo e o ensino em turmas de habilidade mista são elementos centrais do ensino comunicativo de línguas, mas continuam sendo alguns dos aspectos mais desafiadores da gestão de sala de aula no ensino de inglês. Embora a aprendizagem colaborativa promova interação, autonomia do aprendiz e uso significativo da língua, ela também gera tensões relacionadas à participação desigual, conflitos, comportamento dos alunos e contribuição desequilibrada. Este ensaio acadêmico-reflexivo baseia-se no Módulo 1, Unidade 3 do curso TeachingEnglish: Managing learners and resources do British Council e integra suas recomendações práticas com teoria consolidada em ELT e a experiência profissional do autor. Com base em contribuições de Harmer, Scrivener, Dörnyei, Johnson e Johnson, Tomlinson e Vygotsky, o texto analisa como o planejamento criterioso de tarefas, a atribuição explícita de papéis, a consciência socioafetiva e a diferenciação pedagógica podem favorecer dinâmicas de grupo eficazes em contextos de habilidade mista. Argumenta-se que os desafios do trabalho colaborativo não representam falhas metodológicas, mas características inerentes da aprendizagem social que, quando bem gerenciadas, promovem ambientes de aprendizagem mais inclusivos.

 


Introduction

Group work and mixed-ability instruction are now central to communicative language teaching (CLT), yet they remain among the most demanding aspects of classroom management. While collaborative learning promises increased interaction, learner autonomy, and meaningful language use, it also generates challenges related to participation, conflict, learner behavior, and uneven contribution. Module 1, Unit 3 of the British Council’s TeachingEnglish: Managing learners and resources foregrounds these tensions through authentic teacher scenarios and practical recommendations.

This essay, my 517th post in my reflective journaling blog, integrates those insights with established ELT theory and my own professional reflections as Jonathan Acuña. Drawing on scholars such as Harmer, Scrivener, Dörnyei, Johnson and Johnson, and Vygotsky, the paper argues that effective management of group dynamics and mixed-ability classes requires principled task design, explicit role allocation, socio-affective awareness, and a theoretically informed understanding of learner diversity.

Group Work, Task Structure, and Off-Task Behavior

One of the most common problems in group work is learners drifting into off-task conversation. As described in Teacher 1’s scenario in this British Council’s course, unfocused interaction often results from unclear task design rather than learner indiscipline. Scrivener (2011) emphasizes that “many discipline problems are actually planning problems” (p. 85). When learners do not fully understand what they are expected to produce, they naturally fill the gap with social talk.

The British Council’s recommendation that tasks have a clear structure, visible instructions, and a defined outcome aligns with task-based learning principles. Ellis (2003) defines a pedagogical task as one in which “the primary focus is on meaning” and where learners work toward a clearly defined outcome (p. 9). Without that outcome, learner attention dissipates.

In addressing off-task behavior during group work, I have come to reflects on the tendency of high-performing learners to disengage in unconventional ways. As I have noted, “These unengaged learners can be top performers who may want to ‘shine in class’ differently, so these students can help you demonstrate what learners have to do during the activity” (Acuña 2026). This observation aligns with Harmer’s (2007) assertion that learner disengagement often signals a need for increased responsibility rather than stricter control.

Conflict, Disagreement, and the Social Nature of Learning

Conflicts arising during group work are often perceived as disruptive. Similarly, when discussing classroom conflict, I have always emphasized the inevitability of disagreement in collaborative learning contexts: “Where there are tasks to be performed in a language classroom, we are to have disagreements” (Acuña 2026). From my practitioner’s +30-year experience in the classroom, respect must be explicitly reinforced through classroom norms and recurring reminders, a stance consistent with Dörnyei and Murphey’s (2003) emphasis on establishing a psychologically safe learning environment. However, sociocultural theory reframes disagreement as a potentially constructive force. Vygotsky (1978) famously argued that learning is fundamentally social, stating that “every function in the child’s cultural development appears twice: first, on the social level, and later, on the individual level” (p. 57). From this perspective, disagreement can serve as a catalyst for cognitive development.

Johnson and Johnson (1995), in their work on cooperative learning, assert that “controversy among ideas promotes higher achievement, greater perspective-taking, and more frequent use of higher-level reasoning strategies” (p. 262). This supports the British Council’s recommendation to encourage learners to “agree to disagree” and reflect on how conflict can benefit task outcomes.

Regarding post-conflict group dynamics, my highlight in this area is that the teacher’s role is to mediate beyond linguistic instruction, stating that “as the class administrators and owners, we need to remind our students that in real life… it is always a good idea to find solutions, even with the help of another person” (Acuña 2026). This perspective situates the teacher as a facilitator of social learning, echoing Vygotsky’s (1978) view of learning as inherently social and dialogic. Establishing group contracts reflects what Dörnyei and Murphey (2003) describe as creating “a psychologically safe classroom climate” (p. 72). Such norms reduce the likelihood that conflict becomes personal and help learners recover more easily after disagreements.

Unequal Participation and Role Assignment

Many ELT teachers highlight a persistent issue in group work: unequal participation. Research consistently shows that without structured accountability; group work can lead to social loafing. Johnson and Johnson (1999) stress that effective cooperative learning requires “individual accountability,” ensuring that “each group member is responsible for contributing” (p. 68). Unequal participation is one of those areas that I have also addressed through my participations in teacher conferences, my practitioner insight, drawn from prior TESOL training has taught me that “Assigning the spokesperson role to students who usually struggle forces meaningful engagement and accountability” (Acuña 2026). This strategy operationalizes Johnson and Johnson’s (1999) principle of individual accountability within cooperative learning structures.

The British Council’s emphasis on assigning roles directly reflects this principle. Harmer (2007) notes that roles such as chair, note-taker, and spokesperson “give students a clear reason to participate and a clear understanding of what participation looks like” (p. 166). In my own teaching, assigning the spokesperson role to quieter or weaker learners has proven particularly effective. This practice resonates with Vygotsky’s (1978) concept of the Zone of Proximal Development, where learners perform beyond their current competence with appropriate support.

Monitoring role fulfillment further reinforces accountability. Scrivener (2011) argues that teachers should “listen actively to group work not to control it, but to diagnose learning needs” (p. 98). This diagnostic stance transforms monitoring into a formative, rather than punitive, practice. From my own perspective, this is a way to scaffold learners to have them achieve communication aims and learning objectives.

Managing Learner Behavior and Classroom Roles

Learner behavior cannot be separated from social identity and classroom roles. The British Council’s list of challenging roles, such as the joker or withdrawer, reflects what Dörnyei (2001) describes as learners’ attempts to “negotiate their position within the group” (p. 43). These behaviors often mask deeper needs for recognition, security, or autonomy.

In online university contexts, behavioral management is further complicated by institutional rules. My reflection on enforcing camera policies illustrates the importance of aligning classroom management with institutional frameworks. In relation to learner behavior in online contexts, a policy-informed stance grounded in institutional responsibility is necessary: “This type of behavior is not acceptable and, based on the Student Handbook, students who persist will be considered absent” (Acuña 2026). This institutional approach where I work reflects Harmer’s (2007) argument that effective classroom management depends on a balance between empathy and clearly articulated authority. Harmer (2007) argues that effective teachers balance empathy with authority, noting that “students expect teachers to lead, not abdicate responsibility” (p. 35).

For serious behaviors such as bullying, private intervention is essential. Dörnyei and Murphey (2003) warn that public confrontation can reinforce negative behavior by providing attention. Conversely, silent or withdrawn learners require a supportive approach. As Scrivener (2011) observes, “silence does not necessarily mean disengagement” (p. 67). Offering alternative participation modes acknowledges learner differences without forcing conformity.

Mixed-Ability Classes and Learner Diversity

A foundational premise stated by the British Council is that all classes are mixed-ability classes. This view aligns with contemporary SLA research, which rejects simplistic distinctions between “fast” and “slow” learners. Dörnyei (2005) emphasizes that learner differences stem from a complex interaction of cognitive, affective, and contextual factors, stating that “motivation does not exist in a vacuum but is dynamically shaped by learning environments” (p. 65).

Finally, when reflecting on mixed-ability classes, I have identified a constellation of learner variables including “cognitive load, motivation, study habits, life experience, and work experience” (Acuña 2026), reinforcing Dörnyei’s (2005) claim that learner differences are multidimensional and dynamic rather than reducible to proficiency alone, which closely mirror the British Council’s expanded list. Tomlinson (2014), writing on differentiation, argues that effective teachers “proactively plan varied ways to access content, process ideas, and demonstrate learning” (p. 18). Providing optional extension tasks and choice-based activities allows stronger learners to remain challenged without disadvantaging others.

Factors contributing to being different

personality

age

gender

memory

learning preference

language proficiency

study habits

reasons for learning

preferences for methodology

speeds of working and learning

boredom limits

degree of application and distraction

Taken from the British Council’s course page

https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/676892

Regularly changing groupings further supports social cohesion. Johnson and Johnson (1999) note that rotating groups helps learners develop trust and reduces fixed hierarchies. Encouraging learner autonomy, meanwhile, reflects Holec’s (1981) assertion that autonomy is “the ability to take charge of one’s own learning” (p. 3), a skill essential in mixed-ability contexts.

Conclusion

Managing group dynamics and mixed-ability classes requires more than classroom intuition; it demands theoretically informed decision-making. The British Council’s practical guidance, when viewed through the lens of ELT theory, reveals that challenges such as off-task behavior, conflict, unequal participation, and learner diversity are not failures of group work but inherent features of social learning. By grounding classroom management in principles of cooperative learning, sociocultural theory, motivation research, and differentiation, teachers can transform these challenges into opportunities for deeper engagement. As both research and reflective practice suggest, successful group work depends not on controlling learners, but on designing conditions in which meaningful collaboration can flourish.



San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, January 24, 2026


📚 References

Acuña, J. (January 2026). Professional reflections on group dynamics and mixed-ability instruction. Unpublished reflective coursework for TeachingEnglish: Managing learners and resources, British Council.

British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Managing learners and resources. https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/676892

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

Dörnyei, Z. (2005). The psychology of the language learner. Lawrence Erlbaum.

Dörnyei, Z., & Murphey, T. (2003). Group dynamics in the language classroom. Cambridge University Press.

Ellis, R. (2003). Task-based language learning and teaching. Oxford University Press.

Harmer, J. (2007). How to teach English (2nd ed.). Longman.

Holec, H. (1981). Autonomy and foreign language learning. Pergamon.

Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1995). Creative controversy. Interaction Book Company.

Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1999). Learning together and alone (5th ed.). Allyn & Bacon.

Scrivener, J. (2011). Learning teaching (3rd ed.). Macmillan.

Tomlinson, C. A. (2014). The differentiated classroom (2nd ed.). ASCD.

Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society. Harvard University Press.



Unit 3 Working as a Group and Mixed-Ability Classes by Jonathan Acuña



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Saturday, January 24, 2026



Death, Agency, and Animal Consciousness: A Symbolist–Existential Reading of Horacio Quiroga’s “La insolación”

Animal Consciousness, Death, Existentialism, Fatalism, Horacio Quiroga, La Insolación, Latin American Literature, Symbolism 0 comments

 

A vision of dread beneath the sun
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in January 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     I have always enjoyed Horacio Quiroga’s short stories, perhaps because of his frequent use of animals and personification as central narrative devices. I first encountered his work in the 1990s, when I read several of his stories as a general reader and was immediately drawn to the intensity of their plots and the dramatic conflicts experienced by his characters. Quiroga’s narratives, often marked by fatalism and emotional extremity, left a lasting impression on me long before I approached them from an academic perspective.

     Until recently, however, I had never analyzed Quiroga’s fiction not as a passive reader, but as a literature professor engaged in close reading and critical interpretation. La insolación seemed an especially appropriate choice for this purpose, as it allows for a focused exploration of one of Quiroga’s recurring thematic concerns: death. More specifically, the story offers a striking representation of death as perceived by animals, whose fate becomes inseparable from an environment shaped by heat, decay, and inevitability.

     This essay emerges, therefore, from a double motivation: a long-standing personal appreciation for Quiroga’s storytelling and a professional interest in examining how literary techniques such as symbolism, personification, and animal focalization can be used to explore existential questions. By revisiting La insolación through a symbolist–existential lens, I aim to reflect on how Quiroga constructs the dogs’ experience of death and how their fate invites readers to reconsider agency, consciousness, and vulnerability beyond the human sphere.

Jonathan Acuña


Death, Agency, and Animal Consciousness: A Symbolist–Existential Reading of Horacio Quiroga’s “La insolación”

 

Abstract

Horacio Quiroga’s short story “La insolación” occupies a distinctive place within Latin American narrative because it presents animals—specifically, Mister Jones’s dogs—as existential subjects who confront the arrival of Death. Through a combination of symbolist tension and existential unease, Quiroga constructs a narrative world in which nonhuman characters experience dread, vulnerability, and disorientation when faced with an unavoidable fate imposed by natural forces. This essay, my 516th post for my reflective journaling blog, proposes a symbolist–existential reading of the story, arguing that “La insolación” dramatizes the collapse of agency among the dogs when Death enters their environment. In this process, the oppressive heatstroke becomes a literary symbol of fatal inevitability. Positioned at the intersection of instinct and consciousness, the dogs embody what critics have described as Quiroga’s fatalismo vital: the simultaneous impulse to survive and the certainty of annihilation. By examining the personification of Death, the animals’ internal states, and the symbolic function of the environment, this essay shows how existential terror arises not from human rationality but from the instinctive awareness of creatures trapped within the machinery of fate.

Keywords:

Horacio Quiroga, Symbolism, Existentialism, Animal Consciousness, Death, Fatalism, La Insolación, Latin American Literature

 

 

 

Resumen

El cuento “La insolación” de Horacio Quiroga ocupa un lugar singular dentro de la narrativa latinoamericana al presentar a los animales —en particular, los perros de Mister Jones— como sujetos existenciales que enfrentan la llegada de la Muerte. A través de una combinación de tensión simbolista y desasosiego existencial, Quiroga construye un mundo narrativo en el que los personajes no humanos experimentan miedo, vulnerabilidad y desorientación ante un destino inevitable impuesto por fuerzas naturales. Este ensayo propone una lectura simbolista–existencial del relato y sostiene que “La insolación” representa el colapso de la agencia de los perros cuando la Muerte irrumpe en su entorno, transformando la insolación en un símbolo literario de fatalidad. Situados entre el instinto y la conciencia, los perros encarnan el fatalismo vital característico de Quiroga: el impulso por sobrevivir junto a la certeza de la aniquilación. El análisis de la personificación de la Muerte, los estados internos de los animales y la función simbólica del ambiente revela cómo el terror existencial surge no de la razón humana, sino de una conciencia instintiva atrapada en la lógica del destino.

 

 

Resumo

O conto “La insolación”, de Horacio Quiroga, ocupa um lugar singular na narrativa latino-americana ao apresentar os animais — especialmente os cães de Mister Jones — como sujeitos existenciais que enfrentam a presença da Morte. Por meio de uma combinação de tensão simbolista e inquietação existencial, Quiroga constrói um universo narrativo no qual personagens não humanos vivenciam medo, vulnerabilidade e desorientação diante de um destino inevitável imposto por forças naturais. Este ensaio propõe uma leitura simbolista–existencial do conto, argumentando que “La insolación” dramatiza o colapso da agência dos cães quando a Morte se manifesta em seu ambiente, transformando a insolação em um símbolo literário da fatalidade. Situados entre instinto e consciência, os cães encarnam o fatalismo vital característico da obra de Quiroga: o impulso de sobreviver aliado à certeza da aniquilação. A análise da personificação da Morte, dos estados internos dos animais e da função simbólica do ambiente revela como o terror existencial emerge não da racionalidade humana, mas de uma consciência instintiva submetida ao destino.

 


Horacio Quiroga’s short story “La insolación” occupies a distinctive space within Latin American narrative because it presents animals, specifically, Mister Jones’s dogs, as existential subjects who confront the arrival of Death. Through a unique blend of symbolist tension and existential unease, Quiroga constructs a world in which nonhuman characters experience dread, vulnerability, and disorientation as they confront an unavoidable fate imposed by natural forces. This essay, my 516th post for my reflective journaling blog, proposes a symbolist–existential reading of the story, arguing that “La insolación” dramatizes the collapse of agency among the dogs when Death enters their environment, transforming the oppressive heatstroke (“la insolación”) into a literary symbol of fatal inevitability. At the intersection of instinct and consciousness, the dogs embody what critics describe as Quiroga’s fatalismo vital, the simultaneous urge to survive and the certainty of annihilation. By examining the personification of Death, the dogs’ internal states, and the symbolic function of the environment, the story reveals how existential terror arises not from human rationality but from the instinctual awareness of creatures caught in the machinery of fate.

Looking into Quiroga’s plot

A symbolist–existential approach is appropriate because Quiroga frequently infuses physical or natural phenomena with metaphysical weight. Death in his stories is rarely accidental or merely biological; it is treated as a presence that characters perceive intuitively. As Aníbal González (1987) notes, “Quiroga's fiction surrounds the moment of death with an aura of imminence and silent agency” (p. 42). This conceptualization aligns with the dramatic tension in “La insolación”, where the sun’s heat is not simply meteorological but an omen. The main character’s dogs sense a shift in their environment; their agitation and confusion emerge as existential symptoms of a looming force they cannot name but perceive. Quiroga’s text hints that Death approaches slowly and impersonally through the oppressive sunlight that weakens their bodies. Thus, the story transforms the physical experience of heatstroke into a symbolic visitation of Death, a silent witness altering the trajectory of the dogs’ lives.

Another reason this approach is fruitful is the way the story positions animals as subjects capable of sensing the metaphysical world. Far from depicting them as mechanistic beings responding solely to instinct, Quiroga grants them a limited but meaningful interiority. As Seymour Menton (1975) emphasizes, “Quiroga consistently humanizes animals not through sentimentality but through a deliberate technique that gives them a consciousness parallel to, but distinct from, human awareness” (p. 118). This insight is crucial for interpreting “La insolación.” The dogs in the story recognize changes in one another, the weakening limbs, the unsteadiness, the sudden silences. Although Quiroga does not provide them with human language, he portrays their perception as rich with primitive emotional content: fear, suspicion, alertness, the sense that something unnatural has invaded their space. Through this focalization, the story merges animal instinct with proto-existential awareness, creating characters who feel the weight of their mortality without understanding the mechanisms that threaten them.

The symbolic function of Death in the story’s plot

Death’s symbolic function in the narrative is heightened through this nonhuman consciousness. When the dogs experience “la visita de la Muerte,” the story frames it not as a supernatural apparition but as a perceptual event; their bodies recognize mortality before their minds can conceptualize it. In existential terms, they undergo what Martin Heidegger (1927/1962) famously calls “the call of conscience,” the internal realization of one’s “thrownness” into a world structured by death. While dogs cannot articulate this call, Quiroga constructs their behavior in a way that dramatizes it. They become restless, hypervigilant, or eerily calm; each animal responds differently to the invisible weight pressing upon them. Death here functions as a symbol of existential condition, not moral punishment or narrative justice. It is simply the force that breaks the illusion of stability within Mister Jones’s household.

This dynamic situates “La insolación” within the tradition of literary fatalism. Critics have long recognized that Quiroga’s worldview reflects a belief in the futility of resisting natural or cosmic forces. As Emir Rodríguez Monegal (1967) observes, “La tragedia en Quiroga no proviene del mal sino de la fatalidad indiferente que rodea al ser vivo” (p. 56). In this sense, the dogs in the story embody the same condition as many of Quiroga’s human characters: they struggle within the confines of a universe they cannot control or understand. Their attempts to move, seek shade, or follow instinctual patterns are ultimately insufficient. The heat, functioning symbolically as Death’s instrument, strips them of agency, mirroring the existential limitation of all living beings.

Existential impossibility

The story reinforces existential themes through the dogs’ gradual disorientation. As the heat intensifies, they misinterpret signals, fail to communicate through their familiar animal cues, and lose the capacity to understand their surroundings. Quiroga uses this breakdown of animal communication as a metaphor for the collapse of meaning in the face of mortality. As Jean-Paul Sartre (1943) asserts, “La mort est l’impossibilité de toute possibilité” (p. 665). The dogs’ diminishing capacity for action corresponds to this existential impossibility. Their world becomes smaller, darker, and more chaotic until Death’s arrival becomes the only remaining event.

Yet Quiroga does not portray this condition as purely tragic. There is an eerie beauty in the way the dogs perceive Death, not with philosophical articulation but with embodied intuition. This embodies what critics consider Quiroga’s unique blending of realism and symbolist sensitivity. Ángel Flores (1969) highlights this dimension when he writes, “Quiroga’s jungle narratives achieve a symbolic resonance precisely because the natural world is presented with such visceral concreteness” (p. 91). “La insolación” exemplifies this by grounding its symbolist vision of Death in the physical reality of heat, dizziness, and animal vulnerability. Death’s presence is metaphysical only because it is so powerfully material.

A fragile illusion

The story ultimately encourages readers to consider agency as a fragile illusion, human or animal. Mister Jones’s dogs, though endowed with instinctual intelligence, are no match for the larger forces operating around them. Their fate illustrates the existential principle that consciousness does not grant control; it merely intensifies awareness of one’s limited condition. Quiroga uses animal protagonists not to sentimentalize suffering but to explore the universal experience of confronting mortality without comprehension. The dogs’ lives change irrevocably the moment Death steps into their world, and their helplessness before this transformation underscores the symbolic force of Quiroga’s narrative.

Concluding remarks

In conclusion, a symbolist–existential reading of “La insolación” reveals that the story transcends its literal plot of dogs succumbing to heatstroke. Quiroga transforms the physical phenomenon of insolation into an existential visitation of Death, granting the dogs a degree of consciousness that allows readers to perceive their fear, confusion, and diminishing agency. Through the convergence of symbolism, animal perception, and fatalistic environment, the story illustrates the universal condition of beings who sense the inevitability of Death yet lack the means to resist it. In the silent, scorching landscape of Quiroga’s fiction, the dogs’ trembling awareness becomes a powerful expression of existential truth.

San José, Costa Rica

Wednesday, January 21, 2026


 

📚 References

Flores, Á. (1969). Latin American novels of the twentieth century. New York University Press.

González, A. (1987). Journalism and the development of Spanish American narrative. University of Texas Press.

Heidegger, M. (1962). Being and time (J. Macquarrie & E. Robinson, Trans.). Harper & Row. (Original work published 1927)

Menton, S. (1975). El cuento latinoamericano. Twayne Publishers.

Quiroga, H. (2025). La insolación. In D. Centeno Maldonado & C. Sandoval (Eds.), Cuentos imprescindibles del siglo XX de América Latina (pp. 27–33). Editorial Alma.

Rodríguez Monegal, E. (1967). Genio y figura de Horacio Quiroga. Editorial Universitaria.

Sartre, J.-P. (1943). L’être et le néant. Gallimard.


Speculative Character Reflections

Speculative Character Reflections by Jonathan Acuña


Discussion Guide for Horacio Quiroga’s “La insolación”

Discussion Guide for Horacio Quiroga’s “La Insolación” by Jonathan Acuña



Death, Agency, And Animal Consciousness - A Symbolist–Existential Reading of Horacio Quiroga’s “La Insolación” by Jonathan Acuña



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