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    Jonathan Acuña Solano, Post Author
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Language, Rationality, and the Limits of Humanity in Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur

Animal-Machine, Bergson, Cultural Assimilation, Lacan, Language, Leopoldo Lugones, Nietzsche, Postcolonialism, Promethean Myth, Psychoanalysis, rationality, Yzur 0 comments

 

Yzur in a tapestry of philosophical tension
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in December 2025

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur (1906) was new to me, since I had never read anything by this author. The plot in the story presents a profound exploration of the limits of reason, the ethics of human ambition, and the boundaries between humanity and otherness. There is a n experiment, Frankenstein-like in essence, where a person plays God.

     In my way of seeing the story built by Lugones, the author constructs a modern allegory that interrogates Enlightenment rationality, psychoanalytic desire, and the cultural violence of civilization. Yzur dramatizes the tragedy of human self-definition through domination. And the story reveals how the quest for speech transforms into an act of repression, culminating in death, a mirror of human hubris.


Language, Rationality, and the Limits of Humanity in Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur

 

Abstract

This essay analyzes Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur through four interpretive lenses: (1) the crisis of Enlightenment rationality, using Descartes’s mechanistic animal doctrine alongside Nietzsche’s critique of intellectual arrogance and Bergson’s concept of intuitive vitality; (2) a psychoanalytic reading grounded in Lacanian theory of the mirror stage, desire, repression, and the Symbolic order; (3) the Promethean and biblical allegories of transgression, exile, and the fall from original language; and (4) a postcolonial interpretation in which Yzur’s suffering mirrors the violence of cultural assimilation imposed on colonized subjects. Through these frameworks, the essay argues that Yzur exposes modernity’s tragic contradictions: reason becomes a tool for domination, language becomes a mechanism of repression, and the pursuit of humanity paradoxically destroys the very life it seeks to elevate. Lugones’s story thus emerges as a philosophical and ethical indictment of rational pride, revealing the human desire for mastery as a path toward moral exile.

Key Words:

Leopoldo Lugones, Yzur, rationality, Lacan, Animal-Machine, Nietzsche, Bergson, Promethean Myth, Psychoanalysis, Postcolonialism, Language, Cultural Assimilation

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo examina Yzur de Leopoldo Lugones a partir de cuatro ejes analíticos: (1) la crítica a la racionalidad ilustrada mediante el concepto cartesiano del animal-máquina, la desconfianza de Nietzsche hacia la soberbia intelectual y la intuición vital bergsoniana; (2) una lectura psicoanalítica basada en las ideas de Lacan sobre el estadio del espejo, el deseo, la represión y el orden simbólico; (3) las alegorías prometeicas y bíblicas de la transgresión, la caída y la pérdida del lenguaje edénico; y (4) una interpretación poscolonial que entiende el sufrimiento de Yzur como una metáfora de la violencia cultural ejercida sobre los pueblos colonizados. Desde estas perspectivas, el ensayo argumenta que Yzur revela las paradojas de la modernidad: la razón se convierte en instrumento de dominio, el lenguaje en mecanismo de represión, y la búsqueda de “humanizar” produce destrucción. La muerte de Yzur, así, funciona como una denuncia ética de la soberbia racional moderna.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio analisa Yzur, de Leopoldo Lugones, por meio de quatro abordagens críticas: (1) a crise da racionalidade iluminista, a partir do conceito cartesiano do animal-máquina, da crítica de Nietzsche à arrogância intelectual e da noção bergsoniana de intuição vital; (2) uma leitura psicanalítica inspirada em Lacan, especialmente o estádio do espelho, o desejo, a repressão e o ingresso no simbólico; (3) as alegorias prometeicas e bíblicas relacionadas à transgressão, à queda e à perda da linguagem original; e (4) uma leitura pós-colonial que interpreta o sofrimento de Yzur como metáfora da violência cultural da assimilação imposta aos povos colonizados. O ensaio conclui que Yzur revela as contradições da modernidade: a razão torna-se instrumento de dominação, a linguagem se converte em repressão e o impulso de “humanizar” conduz à destruição. A morte de Yzur emerge como um espelho crítico da soberba racional e do exílio ético do ser humano moderno.

 


The Fallacy of Rational Supremacy: Lugones and the Crisis of Reason

In the short story Yzur, Leopoldo Lugones constructs a modern fable of scientific arrogance. The narrator’s obsession with teaching an ape to speak embodies the Cartesian legacy of mechanistic thought, a worldview that reduces living beings to automatons devoid of consciousness or soul. René Descartes famously asserted that “the animal-body is a machine” and held that animals are “without feeling or awareness of any kind” (Cottingham, 2009, p. 551) referencing the doctrine of the bête-machine. Descartes wrote in the Discourse on Method: “the animal body … as a machine which, having been made by the hand of God, is incomparably better ordered … than any of those … invented by human beings” (Descartes, 1637/1985, p. 56). Lugones’s narrator, trained in that positivist spirit, treats Yzur as both object and hypothesis. The ape’s body becomes a laboratory for the scientist’s metaphysical ambition, a test case for his belief that humanity’s essence lies in speech, and it looks like the narrative voice in the story wants to bestow humanity into Yzur. It is the narrator’s idea that, motivated by the idea that monkeys were once humans who, by giving up speech, descended on the evolutionary scale to their current state, he wants to bestow Yzur with humanity.

Yet the narrative progressively undermines this mechanistic worldview. Yzur’s gradual demonstration of intelligence, empathy, and emotional depth defies the notion of animal automatism. He responds to affection, displays loyalty, and even exhibits what the narrator interprets as conscience. In this reversal, Lugones anticipates Nietzsche’s assertion that “life itself is WILL TO POWER; self-preservation is only one of the indirect and most infrequent consequences thereof” (Nietzsche, 1886/1998, sec. 13). Moreover, Nietzsche also states: “The ‘will’ can naturally only operate on ‘will’ … in short, the hypothesis must be hazarded, whether will does not operate on will wherever ‘effects’ are recognized—and whether all mechanical action … is not just the power of will” (Nietzsche, 1886/1998, sec. 2). The scientist’s insistence on proving his theory reflects this Nietzschean critique of modern hubris: the belief that through intellect alone humanity can master life’s mysteries.

In addition, Bergson’s philosophy of intuition contrasts the mechanical intellect’s rigidity with élan vital, the creative force of life. He argues that “intellect is always a ready-made instrument … it cannot grasp what is new; whereas intuition can embrace the flow of life in its continuity” (Bergson, 1907/1944, p. 89). The narrator’s experiment, driven by method and calculation, fails because it denies this intuitive vitality. In his attempt to force Yzur into the mold of rational speech, he kills the very life he sought to elevate. The ape’s muteness becomes not a sign of inferiority but of resistance, the voice of what Bergson might call “life’s inexpressible continuity.” By the story’s end, Lugones’s narrative dismantles the Cartesian paradigm and exposes the moral bankruptcy of reason detached from compassion. In Yzur’s death, rational progress culminates in ethical regression; knowledge triumphs only by destroying what it sought to understand.

The Psychoanalytic Double: Desire, Repression, and the Mirror of Language

From a psychoanalytic perspective, Yzur dramatizes the tension between desire and repression through the narrator’s relationship with his subject. It can be stated that Yzur becomes a mirror of the narrator’s unconscious, his need to affirm humanity through the reflection of an “other.” In Jacques Lacan’s theory of the mirror stage, “the Mirror Stage is a drama whose internal thrust is precipitated from insufficiency to anticipation—and which manufactures the subject, caught up in the lure of spatial identification” (Lacan, 1949/2006). Lacan writes: “This form [the Ideal-I of the mirror stage] situates the agency of the ego … in a fictional direction” (Lacan, 1949/2006). The scientist’s (or narrator’s) fascination with Yzur mirrors this process: he sees in the ape both his evolutionary past and his desired reflection, a creature that can confirm humanity’s uniqueness by reproducing it.

However, this identification quickly becomes pathological. The narrator’s sense of self depends on Yzur’s progress; his failure to elicit speech from the ape threatens his symbolic identity as a rational subject. In Lacanian terms, Yzur becomes the objet petit a, the unattainable object of desire that structures the narrator’s pursuit of knowledge. The ape’s silence functions as repression, the unspoken remainder of the narrator’s own unconscious guilt and lack of tenderness.

Lacan’s concept of the Symbolic order, the realm of language, law, and social identity, illuminates the tragedy at the story’s core. Entry into language entails separation from instinct and immediacy; language means being “humanized”, something the scientist is looking for. The narrator’s experiment thus represents humanity’s endless compulsion to reassert its entry into the Symbolic, to reaffirm that the Word distinguishes man from beast (or from ape, in this very case). Yet ironically, this obsession exposes the emptiness behind the signifier. Yzur’s inability to articulate words does not mean he lacks humanity; rather, it reveals that human speech itself may be a defense against the inexpressible truths of emotion and empathy.

In the end, Yzur’s death can be read as the ultimate return of the repressed. The creature’s silence transforms into a final act of communication: a gesture of sacrifice that says more than language ever could. The scientist’s tears and guilt confirm the psychoanalytic reversal; he has projected his own unconscious fragmentation onto the creature, and through Yzur’s destruction, he has come to recognize the abyss within himself. The mirror shatters into a million pieces, leaving behind only a broken reflection of reason’s self-inflicted wound.

Promethean Ambition and the Allegory of the Fall

On a mythic plane, Lugones’s scientist inherits the Promethean archetype, the overreacher who dares to rival divine creation. Prometheus’s theft of fire symbolizes humanity’s quest for knowledge and autonomy, but also the curse of perpetual suffering. As Viscoli (1974) explains, “The core of the archetype – that man must pay a price for fire – suggests that, although greater awareness is available, man must suffer for it.” Lugones re-imagines that myth within the modern laboratory: the “fire” here is speech, the sacred medium of consciousness and creativity. To give speech to an ape is to replay the act of divine rebellion, to attempt to recreate humanity in one’s own image.

Yet the experimenter’s aspiration carries within it the seeds of damnation, quite like what happens to Dr. Frankenstein with his creature. Yzur’s suffering, culminating in self-destruction, mirrors Prometheus’s torment on the rock. Knowledge becomes punishment for Yzur; enlightenment, a form of enslavement. The scientist’s ambition to bestow language on the voiceless turns into a metaphysical transgression, a violation of the natural and moral order. Lugones’s narrative thus transforms the laboratory into a modern Olympus, where humanity plays god and confronts the tragic consequences of its pride.

This mythic dimension deepens when the story is read through the Edenic and Babelian motifs. In the biblical account of Babel, language becomes fragmented and humanity’s attempt at unity through speech is punished. Nietzsche himself criticized “positivism, which stops before phenomena saying ‘there are only facts,’ I would say: no, facts are precisely what there are not, only interpretations” (Nietzsche, 1886/1998). Lugones’s narrator, in attempting to teach Yzur to speak, seeks to recover that lost Edenic language, to heal the separation between human and animal, nature and culture. Yet, as in the biblical narrative, the attempt ends in failure and exile. Yzur’s silence echoes humanity’s expulsion from paradise: the impossibility of absolute communication.

The story’s allegorical undertones also evoke the fallen angel motif. Like Lucifer, the narrator aspires to divine knowledge, only to be cast down by his own arrogance. Yzur’s death functions as both punishment and revelation: the recognition that divine creation cannot be replicated without moral ruin. Lugones, steeped in Symbolist aesthetics and metaphysical speculation, crafts in Yzur a fable of ontological exile, the eternal distance between the Word and the world, between intellect and life. Based on Silva-Rojas, Armijo, and Nuñez (2015), “Exile has been something permanent throughout the history of mankind. In ancient times, it may be found the idea that this world dwelled by human beings is not our own home, which has been a mythic vision widespread in various cultural traditions (1). Exile has been viewed as a paradigm in which the notion of human life, at least in western culture, is interpreted as being exiled (2).” The experimenter in Lugones’s story is in search of breaking the paradigm and share his “exile” with Yzur, a part of being human, exiled.

The Violence of Cultural Assimilation: Yzur as the Colonized Other

Beyond its philosophical and psychological layers, Yzur can be read as a profound commentary on colonial power and cultural violence. The narrator’s attempt to teach Yzur a human language parallels the historical imposition of European culture and reason upon colonized peoples in Latin America. Just as the scientist demands that Yzur abandon his natural form of communication, colonial systems demanded that indigenous peoples renounce their languages, rituals, and ways of knowing in favor of Western rationality.

This act of “civilizing” the ape mirrors what postcolonial theorist Gayatri Spivak (1988) terms epistemic violence: the silencing of subaltern voices through the imposition of dominant discourse. Yzur’s muteness, therefore, becomes both literal and symbolic, the enforced silence of the colonized other whose humanity is recognized only when it imitates the colonizer. The scientist, despite his affection for Yzur, embodies the paternalistic logic of empire: benevolent in intention, destructive in outcome, punitive when being, let’s say, disobeyed.

Yzur’s suffering and final death dramatize the price of assimilation. Forced into a linguistic system that negates his essence, he ultimately destroys himself rather than betrays his nature. This act can be interpreted as a silent rebellion, a refusal to submit to the oppressive structure of imposed civilization. The narrator’s remorse at the end reveals his own complicity in this moral tragedy. In destroying Yzur, he has reenacted the violence that modernity inflicts upon all forms of otherness: the animal, the indigenous, the emotional, and the intuitive.

Through this lens, Lugones anticipates later critiques of anthropocentrism and colonial modernity. His story exposes the dark underside of the “civilizing mission”, whether scientific or imperial. By giving the ape the role of the colonized subject, Lugones destabilizes the very categories of “human” and “animal”. The supposed elevation of Yzur to humanity becomes instead a descent of humanity into brutality, revealing that civilization itself can be a form of barbarism when built on domination and erasure.

Conclusion

Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur stands as a prophetic allegory of modernity’s paradoxes, a tale that intertwines philosophy, psychology, mythology, and history to question what it truly means to be human. Through the interplay of Cartesian mechanism and Nietzschean skepticism, the story dismantles the illusion of rational supremacy; through Lacanian psychoanalysis, it exposes the unconscious desire and repression underlying humanity’s quest for mastery; through Promethean and Biblical allegory, it reveals the tragic cycle of transgression and fall; and through postcolonial interpretation, it denounces the cultural violence implicit in the drive to civilize and dominate.

In Yzur’s death, Lugones crystallizes a universal irony: the more humanity seeks to affirm its superiority through reason and speech, the more it betrays the compassion and humility that define true consciousness. The ape’s silence reverberates as a moral indictment of modern civilization, a silence that speaks of pain, loss and the enduring need to reconcile intellect with empathy. Ultimately, Yzur becomes a mirror in which readers confront the abyss of their own rational pride, reminding us that knowledge without love leads not to enlightenment but to exile.


📚 References

Bergson, H. (1944). Creative evolution (A. Mitchell, Trans.). Project Gutenberg. (Original work published 1907) https://www.gutenberg.org/files/26163/26163-h/26163-h.htm

Descartes, R. (1985). Discourse on the method (J. Cottingham, Trans.). Cambridge University Press. (Original work published 1637) https://www.earlymoderntexts.com/assets/pdfs/descartes1637.pdf

Lacan, J. (2006). “The mirror stage as formative of the I function as revealed in psychoanalytic experience.” In É. Roudinesco (Ed.), Écrits: The first complete edition in English (B. Fink, Trans., pp. 75–81). W. W. Norton. (Original work delivered 1949) https://www.academia.edu/1539509/Summary_of_Lacan_s_The_Mirror_Stage_as_Formative_of_the_Function_of_the_I_as_Revealed_in_Psychoanalytic_Experience_

Lugones, L. (1906). Yzur. In Las fuerzas extrañas. Buenos Aires: Félix Lajouane.

Nietzsche, F. (1998). Beyond good and evil (Helen Zimmern, Trans.). Vintage Books. (Original work published 1886) https://ia803401.us.archive.org/23/items/beyond-good-and-evil_202105/Beyond%20good%20and%20evil.pdf

Silva Rojas, M., Armijo, J., and Nuñez, G. (2015). Philosophical and Psychological Perspective of Exile: On Time and Space Experiences. DOI:10.3389/fpsyt.2015.00078

Spivak, G. C. (1988). Can the subaltern speak? In C. Nelson & L. Grossberg (Eds.), Marxism and the interpretation of culture (pp. 271–313). University of Illinois Press. https://voidnetwork.gr/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Can-the-subaltern-speak-by-Gayatri-Spivak.pdf

Viscoli, L. (1974). The Promethean Archetype. UNM Digital Repository. https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/engl_etds/406/


Exploring Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur [Handout]

Exploring Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur [Handout] by Jonathan Acuña



Language, Rationality, And the Limits of Humanity in Leopoldo Lugones’s Yzur by Jonathan Acuña







Saturday, December 06, 2025



The Reflective Institution: Using the Kirkpatrick Model to Evaluate ELT Professional Development Systemically

Data-Informed Leadership, ELT Institutions, Kirkpatrick Model, Organizational Learning, PD, Professional Development, Reflective Practice, Teacher Evaluation 0 comments

 

Visualizing systemic growth and reflective culture
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in December 2025

Introductory Note to the Reader

     I have mentioned this before: I am not a teacher supervisor, nor do I claim expertise in institutional evaluation. Yet I firmly believe that the Kirkpatrick Model offers robust possibilities for evaluating professional development (PD) systemically. If institutions operate under the premise that reflection must move beyond individual practice toward organizational learning, then integrating the Kirkpatrick four-level model with Guskey’s (2000) framework for PD evaluation becomes essential. This integration allows data-informed educational leadership to guide institutional decision-making more coherently.

     Although I am not an expert in reflective practice, I strongly believe that reflective institutions view data not as mechanisms of control, but as catalysts for collective inquiry, innovation, and pedagogical improvement. In environments where reflection is shared, where evidence becomes dialogue, and where leadership uses data as a mirror rather than a microscope, the institution itself becomes a learning organism, capable of adapting, evolving, and supporting teachers in meaningful ways.


The Reflective Institution: Using the Kirkpatrick Model to Evaluate ELT Professional Development Systemically

 

Abstract

This essay explores how the Kirkpatrick Model can be applied systemically within English Language Teaching (ELT) institutions to strengthen teacher professional development (PD) and promote organizational learning. Moving beyond individual reflection, the essay argues that sustainable pedagogical growth requires institutions to adopt reflective structures supported by evidence, collaboration, and coherent evaluation processes. Integrating Kirkpatrick’s four levels with Guskey’s (2000) model of PD evaluation allows organizations to align teacher learning with institutional goals, student outcomes, and long-term innovation. Using insights from Avalos (2011), Schön (1983), and Reeves (2020), the essay conceptualizes the reflective institution as an ecosystem where data-informed dialogue drives continuous improvement. Ultimately, the paper presents a vision for ELT institutions that move from isolated PD initiatives to systemic reflective cultures capable of adaptive change and enhanced educational effectiveness.

Keywords

Kirkpatrick Model, Professional Development, PD, Reflective Practice, Data-Informed Leadership, ELT Institutions, Organizational Learning, Teacher Evaluation

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo analiza cómo el Modelo de Kirkpatrick puede aplicarse de manera sistémica en instituciones de enseñanza del inglés (ELT) para fortalecer el desarrollo profesional docente (PD) y promover el aprendizaje organizacional. Más allá de la reflexión individual, se argumenta que el crecimiento pedagógico sostenible requiere que las instituciones adopten estructuras reflexivas basadas en evidencia, colaboración y procesos coherentes de evaluación. Al integrar los cuatro niveles de Kirkpatrick con el marco de evaluación de PD de Guskey (2000), las organizaciones pueden alinear el aprendizaje docente con los objetivos institucionales, los resultados estudiantiles y la innovación a largo plazo. A partir de Avalos (2011), Schön (1983) y Reeves (2020), el ensayo conceptualiza a la institución reflexiva como un ecosistema donde el diálogo basado en datos impulsa la mejora continua. En última instancia, se presenta una visión de instituciones ELT que evolucionan de iniciativas aisladas a culturas reflexivas sistémicas capaces de adaptarse y mejorar su eficacia educativa.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio examina como o Modelo de Kirkpatrick pode ser aplicado de forma sistêmica em instituições de ensino de inglês (ELT) para fortalecer o desenvolvimento profissional docente (PD) e promover a aprendizagem organizacional. Para além da reflexão individual, argumenta-se que o crescimento pedagógico sustentável exige que as instituições adotem estruturas reflexivas apoiadas por evidências, colaboração e processos de avaliação coerentes. Ao integrar os quatro níveis de Kirkpatrick com o modelo de avaliação de PD de Guskey (2000), as organizações podem alinhar a aprendizagem docente aos objetivos institucionais, aos resultados dos alunos e à inovação de longo prazo. Com base em Avalos (2011), Schön (1983) e Reeves (2020), o ensaio conceitua a instituição reflexiva como um ecossistema em que o diálogo informado por dados impulsiona a melhoria contínua. Por fim, apresenta-se uma visão de instituições ELT que passam de iniciativas isoladas para culturas reflexivas sistêmicas capazes de adaptação e maior eficácia educacional.

 


Introduction

While reflection has traditionally been regarded as an individual endeavor, educational progress increasingly depends on institutions capable of collective introspection where guidance to individual teachers can be provided and scaffolded. In English Language Teaching (ELT), professional development (PD) is often evaluated through individual performance outcomes, teacher satisfaction (i.e. student perception of instructor’s class delivery), observed classroom performance (usually by a supervisor), or/and learner progress and accomplishments in the target language. However, without a systemic perspective, these data remain fragmented, failing to inform institutional decision-making for long-term innovation and teacher training. The Kirkpatrick Model, when applied at an organizational level to cohorts of language instructors, offers a structured approach to institutional reflection, enabling leaders to measure PD not only in terms of participation or satisfaction but in terms of cultural transformation and student outcomes.

From Individual Reflection to Organizational Learning

Avalos (2011) describes teacher learning as a social process deeply embedded in institutional and policy contexts. Thus, professional growth cannot be fully understood without examining how schools and language centers structure, support, and evaluate teacher professional development. A “reflective institution” recognizes that the effectiveness of PD programs depends on a) coherence between teacher learning, b) organizational goals, and c) classroom realities. The transition from reflective practitioners to reflective organizations entails aligning institutional vision with ongoing cycles of inquiry, evidence, and feedback, essentially, embedding Schön’s (1983) “reflective practice” into the institutional DNA.

Applying the Kirkpatrick Model Systemically

Kirkpatrick and Kirkpatrick (2016) proposed that training effectiveness should be assessed across four interconnected levels:

1.

Reaction –

participants’ perceptions of training relevance and quality;

2.

Learning –

acquisition of knowledge, skills, and attitudes;

3.

Behavior –

transfer of learning to professional practice; and

4.

Results –

measurable organizational outcomes.

 

At the institutional level, these layers provide a roadmap for evaluating teacher professional development (PD) as a living system rather than a sequence of isolated events.

Level 1

(Reaction):

Institutional surveys and feedback loops capture teachers’ emotional and cognitive responses to PD activities.

Level 2

(Learning):

Digital portfolios and peer-review systems document growth in professional competencies in terms of planning, activity design, materials development, class execution, or any other area the organization deems necessary.

Level 3

(Behavior):

Observational data, mentoring reports, and classroom analytics reveal the extent of behavior change in the areas where the institution wants language instructors to develop themselves professionally.

Level 4

(Results):

Student learning outcomes, innovation adoption rates, and retention data indicate whether PD aligns with institutional goals.

As Guskey (2000) emphasizes, meaningful evaluation requires connecting these four levels through consistent evidence collection and reflection cycles, ensuring that the impact of PD becomes visible and actionable.

Institutional Reflection and Data-Informed Leadership

Reeves (2020) highlights that effective educational leadership integrates data interpretation with moral purpose. Reflective institutions use analytics not merely for accountability but for professional dialogue and collaborative inquiry in terms of teacher training and the ulterior implantation of ideas within the classroom setting. When teachers, coaches, and administrators collectively interpret evidence, such as student performance trends or instructional patterns, they move from compliance to commitment. This shared reflection transforms evaluation into learning, fostering a culture where data are perceived as mirrors rather than microscopes. Data become tools to help language teachers develop specific areas that require reinforcement or improvement.

Moreover, data-informed reflection enables leaders to identify systemic blind spots where teachers have already fallen into a planning/teaching cycle that is not held or supported institutionally. Among these blind spots, under-supported teaching areas, inconsistent pedagogical standards, or misaligned institutional expectations can be pointed out. By responding to these insights through iterative PD design, institutions embody what Kirkpatrick and Kirkpatrick (2016) call the chain of evidence, a feedback loop connecting teacher learning with organizational effectiveness, with data-gathered evidence to boost teacher change of behavior and prompt expected results.

Building a Culture of Reflective Evaluation

A reflective institution operationalizes evaluation as part of its identity; PD is engrained into its teacher development DNA. Guskey (2000) insists that the ultimate measure of PD is not teacher satisfaction but student success and institutional coherence. Embedding reflective evaluation requires three conditions:

1.

Transparency:

Sharing PD goals, criteria, and outcomes openly with staff;

2.

Participation:

Involving teachers in the design and review of PD initiatives; and

3.

Continuity:

Treating evaluation as cyclical, not episodic.

When institutions adopt these three principles, reflection becomes systemic; it becomes an ongoing habit of evidence-based adaptation that can transform teacher behavior and institutional results. As Avalos (2011) notes, this “learning culture” strengthens teachers’ sense of belonging and professional agency, leading to greater innovation and retention.

Toward Reflective Ecosystems in ELT

The future of ELT professional development lies in taking stakeholders into transforming institutions into teacher reflective ecosystems. In such systems, feedback from multiple sources (teacher reflections on their teaching practice, student data including grades and teacher evaluation, AI analytics of institutional processes, and peer mentoring) feeds into institutional PD decision-making. Reflective ecosystems integrate Kirkpatrick’s model with digital affordances, allowing real-time tracking of PD impact and contextual alignment with teaching practices. In these environments, leadership evolves from directive management to mentorship stewardship, guiding collective reflection toward continuous improvement and shared purpose.

Conclusion

The reflective institution embodies the final stage of professional maturity in ELT: moving from personal growth to organizational transformation backed up by all stakeholders. By applying the Kirkpatrick Model systemically, educational leaders can bridge the gap between teacher development and institutional outcomes, creating sustainable learning environments rooted in inquiry, empathy, and evidence. Reflection, when institutionalized, ceases to be a private act; it becomes a culture of accountability, adaptability, and innovation. The reflective institution, therefore, stands as the culmination of a professional journey that begins with the individual but matures through the collective.


📚 References

Avalos, B. (2011). Teacher professional development in teaching and teacher education over ten years. Teaching and Teacher Education, 27(1), 10–20. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2010.08.007

Guskey, T. R. (2000). Evaluating professional development. Corwin Press. Retrieved from https://books.google.co.cr/books/about/Evaluating_Professional_Development.html?id=CklqX4zgDtgC&redir_esc=y

Kirkpatrick, D. L., & Kirkpatrick, J. D. (2016). Kirkpatrick’s four levels of training evaluation. Association for Talent Development. Retrieved from https://books.google.co.cr/books?hl=en&lr=&id=mo--DAAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PT10&dq=Kirkpatrick,+D.+L.,+%26+Kirkpatrick,+J.+D.+(2016).+Kirkpatrick%E2%80%99s+four+levels+of+training+evaluation.+Association+for+Talent+Development.&ots=LOIcWOrmUu&sig=0ufOyD-6tXUyorDQhFPDrzp0gl4#v=onepage&q&f=false

Reeves, T. C. (2020). Data-informed educational leadership: Using evidence for continuous improvement. Educational Technology Research and Development, 68(5), 2341–2357. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1007/s11423-020-09818-5

Schön, D. A. (1983). The reflective practitioner: How professionals think in action. Basic Books. https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/mono/10.4324/9781315237473/reflective-practitioner-donald-sch%C3%B6n


Reader’s Comprehension and Reflection Worksheet

Reader’s Comprehension and Reflection Worksheet by Jonathan Acuña



Using the Kirkpatrick Model to Evaluate ELT Professional Development Systemically by Jonathan Acuña






Monday, December 01, 2025



Imagery and Character Symbolism in A Princess of Mars: A Critical Exploration

A Princess of Mars, Character Analysis, Color Motifs, Cultural Allegory, Eco-Criticism, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Imagery, Science Fiction Studies, Symbolism 0 comments

 

Martian Symbolism
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in November 2025

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Having watched the movie John Carter, I felt drawn to examine Edgar Rice Burroughs’s A Princess of Mars through the lens of imagery and character symbolism, using the analytical instrument I have created for my narrative students at the university.

     I wanted to see what the story reveals about how Burroughs’s vivid descriptions of Martian landscapes, color motifs, and tactile sensations help construct the symbology behind the setting and its principal characters, John Carter, Dejah Thoris, and Tars Tarkas, who represent distinct human ideals and cultural tensions.

     My literary exploration goes beyond the adventure aspects of the novel; I want to invite readers to uncover deeper philosophical and ecological arguments embedded in the narrative.


Imagery and Character Symbolism in A Princess of Mars: A Critical Exploration

 

Abstract

This paper analyzes Edgar Rice Burroughs’s A Princess of Mars through the framework of imagery and character symbolism using Acuña-Solano’s Character Analysis Worksheet. By examining the novel’s panoramic landscapes, chromatic contrasts, and tactile descriptions, the study reveals how Burroughs constructs an intricate symbolic universe that extends beyond mere adventure. The planetary decay of Barsoom, the complex racialized color imagery, and the archetypal roles embodied by John Carter, Dejah Thoris, and Tars Tarkas illustrate the novel’s engagement with ecological anxiety, cultural hybridity, gender expectations, and moral evolution. This analysis positions A Princess of Mars as an early exploration of environmental consciousness and cross-cultural ethics, making its themes relevant for contemporary readers.

Keywords:

Edgar Rice Burroughs, A Princess of Mars, Imagery, Symbolism, Eco-Criticism, Character Analysis, Color Motifs, Cultural Allegory, Science Fiction Studies

 

 

Resumen

Este artículo analiza A Princess of Mars de Edgar Rice Burroughs mediante un enfoque centrado en la imaginería literaria y el simbolismo de personajes, utilizando el Character Analysis Worksheet de Acuña-Solano. Al examinar los paisajes marcianos, los contrastes cromáticos y las descripciones sensoriales, el estudio demuestra cómo Burroughs construye un universo simbólico complejo que trasciende la narrativa de aventura. La decadencia ecológica de Barsoom, la imaginería racializada y los arquetipos representados por John Carter, Dejah Thoris y Tars Tarkas revelan preocupaciones relacionadas con el medio ambiente, la hibridación cultural, las normas de género y la evolución moral. Este análisis posiciona la novela como una exploración temprana de la conciencia ecológica y la ética intercultural, relevante para lectores del siglo XXI.

 

 

Resumo

Este artigo examina A Princess of Mars, de Edgar Rice Burroughs, por meio de uma abordagem centrada nas imagens literárias e no simbolismo das personagens, utilizando o Character Analysis Worksheet de Acuña-Solano. Ao analisar as paisagens de Marte, os contrastes cromáticos e as descrições táteis, o estudo revela como Burroughs cria um universo simbólico que ultrapassa a simples aventura. A decadência ecológica de Barsoom, a imagética racializada e os arquétipos representados por John Carter, Dejah Thoris e Tars Tarkas evidenciam reflexões sobre consciência ambiental, hibridização cultural, papéis de gênero e evolução moral. Assim, a novela é posicionada como uma obra pioneira na discussão de temas ecológicos e éticos que permanecem relevantes na contemporaneidade.

 


Introduction

Prof. Acuña-Solano’s Character Analysis Worksheet (n.d.) provides a comprehensive method to study the physical, social, and psychological dimensions of fictional characters. Applying this instrument to Edgar Rice Burroughs’s A Princess of Mars (1917/2005) uncovers a complex interplay between imagery and symbolism that transcends the novel’s adventure surface. Burroughs’s Barsoom is not merely a backdrop for interplanetary romance and combat; it is a moral and philosophical landscape. Through vivid visual detail and archetypal characterization, Burroughs crafts a meditation on civilization, ecological decline, and human resilience.

A cover of a book

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Taken for educational purposes from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Princess_of_Mars#/media/File:Princess_of_Mars_large.jpg 

Imagery in A Princess of Mars

Burroughs’s depiction of Mars is both panoramic and full of sadness. His barren seas, ruined cities, and fading canals evoke a world haunted by loss that was once but won’t be anymore. Filonenko (2022) observes that “Burroughs’ depictions of landscape … repeatedly underscore that Mars is a dead landscape … a terrain wracked by interracial and intertribal conflict resultant from the planet’s endemic resource scarcity” (p. 127). This interpretation frames Barsoom as an active moral presence, a planet conscious of its extinction and groups of Martians wanting to survive despite the bareness of the planet.

John Carter’s journey across these dying terrains amplifies that desolation: “We were twenty days upon the road, crossing two sea bottoms and passing … through or around a number of ruined cities … Twice we crossed the famous Martian waterways … and then camp until dark, when we would slowly approach the cultivated tract … creep silently … across to the arid lands …” (Burroughs, 1917/2005, p. 58). The sensory layering, motion, silence, and ruin, converts travel narrative into lamentation, situating Carter as both explorer and mourner. The readers can activate all their senses while traveling with Carter along all those indomitable dusty run-down places and landscapes.

Color imagery further intensifies meaning of the story’s plot. The contrast between the “red-skinned” Martians of Helium and the “green-skinned” Tharks becomes a visual metaphor for social division and potential unity. According to GradeSaver (n.d.), “the imagery of the green- and red-skinned Martians serves to underscore the essential differences between the cultures of Earth and the cultures of Mars, but … that they are all essentially similar powerfully demonstrates the surface-level value of skin color.” This color polarity present in the narrative of Burroughs critiques superficial hierarchies while exposing the fragility of identity in a decaying world.

Burroughs also uses tactile and chromatic imagery to construct Dejah Thoris as both aesthetic ideal and emblem of vitality: “Her skin was of a light reddish copper color, against which the crimson glow of her cheeks and the ruby of her lips shone with a strangely enhancing effect” (Burroughs, 1917/2005, para. 42). Her description fuses sensuality with her position in Helium’s monarch family, suggesting that physical beauty symbolizes moral endurance amid planetary decline.

Character Representation and Symbolism

Using Acuña-Solano’s framework, each major figure in A Princess of Mars embodies a moral or philosophical archetype.

 

John Carter


·       Carter epitomizes the heroic mediator (a man form Earth whose integrity bridges cultures, something is noted when he declares, “I measured my abilities with those of the mighty Tharks, and I knew that though I might fall, I would never dishonor myself” (Burroughs, 1917/2005, p. 36).

·       His insistence on honor situates him within the tradition of the “noble knight” in Arthurian times, translated into a cosmic setting. As The Brussels Journal (2013) asserts, Burroughs “refined and codified a robust popular masculine narrative … celebrating heroic character, literate knowledge and philosophic inquiry.”

·       Carter’s moral courage transforms conquest into communion, making him an emblem of ethical heroism rather than imperial domination.


Dejah Thoris

 


·       Based on how Burroughs portraits the princess of Helium, she is a synthesis of nobility, sensuality, and intellectual agency. The novel’s author writes about the princess that “Her face was oval and beautiful in the extreme … her eyes large and lustrous … she was entirely naked, nor could any apparel have enhanced the beauty of her figure” (Burroughs, 1917/2005, paras. 42–43).

·       The absence of adornment accentuates authenticity; Dejah Thoris represents truth unveiled in the eyes of John Carter. Far from a passive damsel in many Arthurian knights’ stories, Dejah negotiates politics and conflict with reason and grace.

·       The Brussels Journal (2013) emphasizes that Burroughs’s heroine “exceeds all in her realized humanity,” rejecting both submissive and militant extremes. And if one refers to the time in which this novel was written, Burroughs is going against the social and personal status quo for women. The princess of Helium is one of a kind.


 

Tars Tarkas


·       The green Martian chieftain, the first true friend that Carter makes is Barsoom personifies the paradox of the noble savage. Physically monstrous, “around fifteen feet tall … green skin … double torso … tusks” (Wikipedia, n.d.), Tars Tarkas is nonetheless compassionate, loyal, rational, and an individual ready to learn from his encounters with humans, such as his encounters with Carter.

·       Burroughs contrasts the communal austerity of the Tharks, whose society is “a matter of community interest … coupled with … gloomy, loveless, mirthless existence,” yet “absolutely virtuous” (Liberty Fund, 2023, para. 7). It is by far an “alien” society difficult to understand if one goes by human standards.

·       Tars Tarkas’s rise to leadership, aided by Carter, symbolizes moral evolution: empathy triumphing over brutality, civilization emerging from barbarism. There is a transformation in this character much more evident than when compared to the inhabitants of Zodanga.

Interpretative Discussion

The convergence of imagery and character symbolism produces a multilayered allegory present through John Carter’s narration of his Barsoom adventures. The Martian deserts, dried seas, and ancient, ruined cities, from a symbolism literary approach, mirror ecological and moral exhaustion: an implicit warning about environmental and ethical neglect on our planet and among our societies. Filonenko (2022) interprets Barsoom’s decay as “the literary echo of planetary death, a mirror to human industrial exhaustion” (p. 133). Thus, Burroughs’s Mars anticipates 21st Century eco-fiction, turning pulp adventure into planetary lamentation. It can be concluded that Burroughs expresses his subjective experience and evokes his emotional states in regard to what can happen to our world in the future.

Color imagery in the novel’s narrative reinforces ethical complexity: while red and green Martians signify racialized difference, their shared emotions and moral codes reveal a universal “human condition.” GradeSaver (n.d.) notes that this “surface-level value of skin color” undermines prejudice, suggesting unity through empathy. In parallel, John Carter’s chivalric ethos contrasts with early-twentieth-century imperial narratives; he conquers by understanding, not by domination. The Brussels Journal (2013) rightly identifies this as a celebration of “philosophic inquiry” within masculine virtue.

Yet Burroughs’s text also engages in colonial discourse. The outsider hero intervenes in native affairs, a motif critic have linked to expansionist ideology (OAPEN, 2023). However, his partnerships with Tars Tarkas and Dejah Thoris subvert simple hierarchies, implying that nobility arises from moral conduct rather than birth or race.

Implications for Contemporary Reading

For twenty-first-century readers, A Princess of Mars resonates in unexpected ways. a) Ecologically, the dying planet parallels Earth’s own anxieties about climate crisis and resource depletion. As Filonenko (2022) argues, Burroughs’s Mars “functions as a speculative mirror for human ecological mismanagement” (p. 134). b) Socially, its depiction of color-coded species encourages reflection on race and cultural empathy. ThoughtCo (n.d.) points out that although the Tharks are introduced as “ignorant and primitive,” characters like Tars Tarkas reveal “intelligence and warmth,” undermining colonial stereotypes.

Moreover, Dejah Thoris’s portrayal complicates gender norms. Her courage and wisdom prefigure later science-fiction heroines who embody both intellect and compassion. Carter’s loyalty to her fuses romantic idealism with ethical partnership, reinforcing Burroughs’s humanist core present throughout the novel’s plot. The enduring appeal of A Princess of Mars lies in this dual capacity: to thrill and to provoke reflection.

Conclusion

Applying Jonathan Acuña-Solano’s analytical instrument to A Princess of Mars exposes a narrative rich in imagery, symbolism, and ethical resonance. Mars itself becomes a character, a decaying world that warns and instructs. Through John Carter’s integrity, Dejah Thoris’s nobility, and Tars Tarkas’s moral awakening, Burroughs dramatizes the triumph of virtue across boundaries of race, species, and planet. The novel’s vivid sensory language (its reds, greens, silences, and ruins) constructs a universe where beauty and decay coexist. Over a century later, Burroughs’s vision endures not only as escapist fantasy but as allegory for ecological stewardship, cultural humility, and the universal search for honor in an uncertain cosmos.


📚 References

Acuña-Solano, J. (n.d.). Character Analysis Worksheet. Unpublished classroom handout.

Black Gate. (2012, January 3). Edgar Rice Burroughs’s Mars, Part 1: A Princess of Mars. https://www.blackgate.com/2012/01/03/edgar-rice-burroughss-mars-part-1-a-princess-of-mars/

BookRags. (n.d.). A Princess of Mars Symbols & Objects. https://www.bookrags.com/studyguide-a-princess-of-mars/symbolsobjects.html

Brussels Journal. (2013). Edgar Rice Burroughs and Masculine Narrative. https://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/4066

Burroughs, E. R. (1917/2005). A Princess of Mars. Modern Library.

Filonenko, S. (2022). Delineating Mars: The Geopoetics of the Red Planet in Edgar Rice Burroughs’s A Princess of Mars. Revista Hélice, 8(2), 126–140. https://www.revistahelice.com/revista/Helice_33.pdf

GradeSaver. (n.d.). A Princess of Mars Literary Elements. https://www.gradesaver.com/a-princess-of-mars/study-guide/literary-elements

Liberty Fund. (2023, August 28). Edgar Rice Burroughs’s Martians. https://oll.libertyfund.org/publications/reading-room/2023-08-28-birzer-edgar-rice-burroughs-martians

OAPEN Library. (2023). Literary Criticism and Cultural Imperialism. https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/24083/1006049.pdf

ThoughtCo. (n.d.). A Princess of Mars Study Guide. https://www.thoughtco.com/princess-of-mars-study-guide-4173049

Wikipedia. (n.d.). Tharks. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tharks


Reader’s Handout for A Princess of Mars

Reader’s Handout by Jonathan Acuña



Imagery and Character Symbolism in a Princess of Mars by Jonathan Acuña





Sunday, November 30, 2025



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