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Between the Fantastic and the Aesthetic: A Todorovian and Kazinczyan Reading of Eça de Queirós’s O Defunto

Aesthetics, Eça de Queirós, Fantastic, Gothicism, Hesitation, Kazinczy, Narrative, Supernaturalism, Symbolism, Todorov 0 comments

 

Between natural and supernatural
AI-generated illustration by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in April 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Before embarking on this analysis of Eça de Queirós’s O Defunto, I would like to share a brief personal reflection. For as long as I can remember, stories involving nobles, hidalgos, fidalgos, knights, and members of the medieval and early modern gentry have captivated my imagination. While I have long admired heroic narratives such as The Song of the Cid and The Song of Roland, I often find myself equally drawn to works that combine aristocratic settings with darker themes and moral dilemmas. Among such narratives, Father Luis Coloma’s Paz a los Muertos (Peace to the Dead) and Eça de Queirós’s O Tesouro (The Treasure) have occupied a special place in my reading life. Their Gothic atmospheres, ethical tensions, and reflections on human virtue and vice continue to fascinate me.

     In many ways, O Defunto belongs to that same literary tradition. It intertwines noble characters, moral conflict, religious symbolism, and supernatural suggestion in a narrative that invites readers to reflect on the boundaries between earthly passions and divine intervention. Perhaps this attraction to hidalgos and their stories stems from my own ancestral connections to Spain before my forebears eventually made their way to Costa Rica. On occasion, and only half-jokingly, I wonder whether, in some previous reincarnation, I might have wandered among those very hidalgos whose adventures now fill the pages of the literature I enjoy. Whatever the reason, stories such as O Defunto continue to offer me both intellectual pleasure and aesthetic delight, and it is in that spirit that I invite readers to accompany me through the following analysis.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Between the Fantastic and the Aesthetic: A Todorovian and Kazinczyan Reading of Eça de Queirós’s O Defunto

 

Abstract

This essay examines Eça de Queirós’s short story O Defunto through the complementary theoretical perspectives of Tzvetan Todorov and Ferenc Kazinczy. The study begins by presenting a synopsis of Todorov’s theory of the fantastic, particularly his concept of narrative hesitation between natural and supernatural explanations, and an overview of Kazinczy’s aesthetic principles concerning literary refinement, stylistic elegance, and emotional cultivation. These theoretical frameworks are subsequently applied to Queirós’s narrative in order to explore the ways in which Gothic atmosphere, psychological ambiguity, religious symbolism, and moral conflict contribute to the story’s literary richness. Particular attention is devoted to the representation of supernatural events, the role of uncertainty in the reader’s interpretation, and the artistic qualities of Queirós’s prose. The essay argues that O Defunto occupies a distinctive position between the fantastic and the marvelous, while simultaneously demonstrating the stylistic sophistication valued by Kazinczy’s aesthetic vision. By combining structural and aesthetic approaches, the study highlights the complexity of Queirós’s engagement with Gothic motifs, ethical concerns, and transcendental themes.

Keywords:

Fantastic, Gothicism, Hesitation, Aesthetics, Narrative, Supernaturalism, Symbolism, Todorov, Kazinczy, Eça de Queirós

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo examina el cuento O Defunto de Eça de Queirós a través de las perspectivas teóricas complementarias de Tzvetan Todorov y Ferenc Kazinczy. El estudio comienza con una síntesis de la teoría de lo fantástico de Todorov, especialmente su concepto de vacilación narrativa entre explicaciones naturales y sobrenaturales, así como con una presentación de los principios estéticos de Kazinczy relacionados con el refinamiento literario, la elegancia estilística y la formación de la sensibilidad. Posteriormente, estos marcos teóricos se aplican al relato de Queirós para explorar cómo la atmósfera gótica, la ambigüedad psicológica, el simbolismo religioso y el conflicto moral contribuyen a la riqueza literaria de la obra. Se presta especial atención a la representación de los acontecimientos sobrenaturales, al papel de la incertidumbre en la interpretación del lector y a las cualidades artísticas de la prosa queirosiana. El ensayo sostiene que O Defunto ocupa una posición singular entre lo fantástico y lo maravilloso, al tiempo que manifiesta el refinamiento estilístico valorado por la visión estética de Kazinczy.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio examina o conto O Defunto, de Eça de Queirós, a partir das perspectivas teóricas complementares de Tzvetan Todorov e Ferenc Kazinczy. O estudo inicia-se com uma síntese da teoria do fantástico de Todorov, especialmente seu conceito de hesitação narrativa entre explicações naturais e sobrenaturais, bem como com uma apresentação dos princípios estéticos de Kazinczy relacionados ao refinamento literário, à elegância estilística e ao cultivo da sensibilidade. Em seguida, esses referenciais teóricos são aplicados à narrativa de Queirós para explorar como a atmosfera gótica, a ambiguidade psicológica, o simbolismo religioso e o conflito moral contribuem para a riqueza literária da obra. Dá-se especial atenção à representação dos acontecimentos sobrenaturais, ao papel da incerteza na interpretação do leitor e às qualidades artísticas da prosa queirosiana. O ensaio argumenta que O Defunto ocupa uma posição singular entre o fantástico e o maravilhoso, ao mesmo tempo em que demonstra o refinamento estilístico valorizado pela visão estética de Kazinczy.

 


Eça de Queirós remains one of the most important literary figures of nineteenth-century Portuguese literature. Although he is often associated with realism and social criticism, many of his short stories reveal a strong fascination with mystery, supernatural suggestion, Gothic atmospheres, and psychological ambiguity. From the very beginning of the story, Queirós constructs a Gothic environment through images of darkness, enclosure, and aristocratic severity. The palace of D. Alonso is described as “o escuro e gradeado palácio de D. Alonso de Lara, fidalgo de grande riqueza e maneiras sombrias” (Queirós, 1902/2002, Chapter I), thereby establishing an atmosphere marked by obscurity and psychological tension 

Among these stories, O Defunto occupies a unique place because it combines Catholic symbolism, medieval imagery, psychological tension, and supernatural intervention in a narrative that oscillates between realism and the fantastic. The story presents a world in which death, divine providence, and spectral manifestations intersect with human jealousy and moral corruption. Through this blend of realism and supernatural uncertainty, Queirós creates a text that can be fruitfully examined through the theoretical lenses of Tzvetan Todorov and Ferenc Kazinczy.

Synopsis of Todorov’s Theory of the Fantastic

In The Fantastic: A Structural Approach to a Literary Genre, Tzvetan Todorov (1975) defines the fantastic as the moment of hesitation experienced by both a character and the reader when confronted with apparently supernatural events. According to Todorov (1975), the fantastic exists only while uncertainty remains unresolved. If the strange event eventually receives a rational explanation, the narrative enters the realm of the uncanny. If the supernatural is fully accepted as real, the narrative becomes marvelous. The fantastic therefore inhabits an unstable middle ground between skepticism and belief.

Todorov (1975) further argues that the fantastic depends upon three principal conditions. First, the fictional world must initially resemble ordinary reality and obey recognizable natural laws. Second, the reader and often the characters themselves must experience hesitation regarding the supernatural occurrence. Third, the text must resist purely allegorical or poetic interpretations that would dissolve the ambiguity of the event. The fantastic thus becomes an epistemological problem involving interpretation, perception, and uncertainty.

According to Bolongaro (2014), Todorov’s structural model transformed the study of fantastic literature by shifting critical attention away from supernatural content alone and toward the reader’s interpretive experience. Similarly, Roger Caillois (1966) argues that fantastic literature destabilizes the reader’s understanding of reality by introducing events that threaten rational systems of explanation. These perspectives are particularly relevant for understanding the ambiguous supernaturalism present in O Defunto.

Another important aspect of Todorov’s framework concerns narrative perspective. Todorov (1975) notes that fantastic literature frequently employs limited narration or psychologically vulnerable characters whose perceptions may not be entirely reliable. This narrative strategy intensifies ambiguity because readers cannot fully determine whether supernatural phenomena objectively occur or merely reflect subjective states of mind.

Kazinczy’s Aesthetic Perspective and Literary Refinement

Unlike Todorov, Ferenc Kazinczy did not formulate a systematic theory of fantastic literature. Instead, his literary importance lies in his aesthetic philosophy and his efforts to cultivate linguistic and artistic refinement within literature. According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica (n.d.), Kazinczy played a central role in the modernization of Hungarian literary language and promoted ideals associated with Enlightenment aesthetics and European classicism.

Kazinczy emphasized elegance, emotional nuance, stylistic harmony, and expressive sophistication as essential literary values. His literary philosophy was heavily influenced by writers such as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and William Shakespeare, whose works demonstrated the artistic possibilities of psychologically rich and aesthetically refined prose and drama.

Queirós’s prose demonstrates the type of aesthetic refinement associated with Kazinczy’s literary ideals. D. Leonor is described as “uma menina falada em Castela pela sua alvura, cabelos cor de sol-claro e colo de garça real” (Queirós, 1902/2002, Chapter I). The poetic imagery and rhythmic elegance of this description elevate the narrative beyond simple storytelling and transform physical beauty into an artistic experience shaped through refined language.

From a Kazinczyan perspective, literature should not merely narrate events but should elevate human sensibility through artistic beauty and emotional depth. This approach becomes highly relevant when examining O Defunto, since Queirós constructs his Gothic and supernatural atmosphere through carefully orchestrated prose rather than sensational excess. The emotional power of the story emerges from its stylistic control, symbolic imagery, and rhythmic narrative structure.

The Fantastic Structure of O Defunto

Several scholars have identified Gothic and fantastic elements in Queirós’s fiction. Matos (2020) argues that stories such as O Defunto, A Aia, and O Tesouro incorporate classic Gothic motifs including obscurity, suspense, supernatural suggestion, and fear. According to Matos (2020), Queirós does not employ these elements merely for entertainment but rather as literary mechanisms that deepen symbolic and psychological meaning.

In O Defunto, the narrative revolves around jealousy, betrayal, death, and divine intervention. The medievalized setting, nocturnal atmosphere, and religious symbolism create a world in which supernatural possibilities appear plausible despite the realistic texture of the narration. The appearance of the dead figure, o forcado (the hanged man), introduces precisely the kind of epistemological uncertainty described by Todorov (1975).

The reader continually hesitates between competing interpretations. Is o forcado (the dead man) genuinely returning from beyond the grave? Is the event a miraculous manifestation of divine justice? Or is the apparition merely a psychological projection generated by fear and guilt? Because the narrative refuses to provide definitive clarification, the story remains within the fantastic mode as defined by Todorov (1975).

Furthermore, Lopes and Siqueira (2018) observe that O Defunto blends fantastic hesitation with what may be described as Christian marvelous. In this context, supernatural intervention is linked not only to fear but also to spiritual transcendence and religious morality. This theological dimension complicates Todorov’s categories because Christian readers may interpret miraculous events differently from secular readers.

The fantastic reaches its highest intensity when D. Alonso discovers that the expected corpse, the man that he has staved to death, has mysteriously disappeared. The narrator states that he “não encontrara... o corpo de D. Rui de Cardenas” (Queirós, 1902/2002, Chapter IV). At this precise moment, both the character and the reader experience the hesitation described by Todorov (1975), since rational explanation begins to collapse before apparently supernatural, divine intervention.

Psychological Anxiety and Narrative Ambiguity

A Todorovian analysis of O Defunto reveals that Queirós carefully constructs narrative ambiguity through psychological tension and atmospheric uncertainty. Characters frequently inhabit emotional states dominated by anxiety, suspicion, fear, and guilt. These emotional conditions destabilize perception and intensify the uncertainty surrounding supernatural events.

D. Alonso’s jealousy gradually assumes pathological dimensions throughout the narrative. The narrator explains that he “constantemente agora o trazia vigiado” (Queirós, 1902/2002, Chapter II), revealing the obsessive surveillance through which fear and suspicion begin to dominate his perception of reality., his wife D. Leonor is being unfaithful to him with D. Rui. D. Alonso’s psychological instability contributes directly to the atmosphere of uncertainty that Todorov (1975) identifies as essential to the fantastic mode.

According to David Roas (2011), fantastic literature derives much of its power from its capacity to undermine the reader’s confidence in reality itself. The supernatural becomes disturbing precisely because it disrupts ordinary epistemological frameworks. In O Defunto, death ceases to function as a definitive boundary separating the living from the dead. The apparent permeability between these realms generates existential and psychological instability. It is in this type of realm that o forcado is able to help D. Rui since D. Leonor’s prayer to Santa Virgem do Pilar and since the Virgin has commanded him to do so.

Queirós intensifies this effect through descriptive language filled with darkness, silence, sacred spaces, shadows, and nocturnal imagery. Such Gothic elements create an environment in which ordinary rationality becomes increasingly fragile. As Todorov (1975) explains, the fantastic depends upon this instability because uncertainty itself constitutes the essence of the genre.

Stylistic Beauty and Kazinczyan Refinement

While Todorov’s framework explains the structural ambiguity of O Defunto, Kazinczy’s aesthetic ideals help illuminate the artistic sophistication of Queirós’s prose. The story’s effectiveness depends not only upon supernatural uncertainty but also upon the elegance with which the atmosphere is constructed.

The reader is then able to understand that Queirós employs rhythmic prose, symbolic density, and emotional restraint to create tension gradually rather than relying upon explicit horror. From a Kazinczyan perspective, this stylistic refinement transforms the story into a work of aesthetic harmony rather than mere Gothic sensationalism. It is not just a supernatural narrative where a dead forcado turns back to life to help a lady in distress, to aid D. Rui who has been deceived, and to redeem himself for whatever reason he was hanged up.

Kazinczy (n.d.) believed that literary language should cultivate emotional sensitivity and artistic appreciation. In O Defunto, Queirós achieves this through subtle narrative pacing and carefully balanced imagery. The supernatural elements are presented with poetic ambiguity, allowing the story to oscillate between terror and transcendence.

Herrero Cecilia (2010) argues that fantastic literature often functions through a “poetics of indeterminacy” in which uncertainty itself becomes aesthetically productive. This observation aligns closely with both Todorov’s structuralism and Kazinczy’s aesthetic ideals. In Queirós’s story, ambiguity becomes not only a thematic device but also an artistic principle.

This aestheticization of the fantastic distinguishes Queirós from purely Gothic sensationalism. The story’s emotional power emerges from the fusion of beauty and fear. Such fusion resembles what later theorists of the fantastic would describe as the coexistence of attraction and anxiety within supernatural literature. Juan Herrero Cecilia (2010) notes that fantastic literature frequently operates through a “poetics of indeterminacy,” in which uncertainty itself becomes aesthetically productive. From a Kazinczyan perspective, the literary value of O Defunto lies precisely in this aesthetic control. The language shapes emotional perception with elegance and discipline, allowing the supernatural to appear both believable and transcendent.

Religion, Morality, and Symbolic Justice

Another important dimension of O Defunto concerns morality and divine justice. Unlike many modern fantastic narratives that emphasize existential absurdity, Queirós’s story retains a strong ethical framework. The supernatural intervention appears connected to moral restoration and spiritual order.

The conclusion of the story transforms supernatural fear into spiritual transcendence. D. Rui raises his eyes “com uma esperança muito pura e toda feita de graça celeste, como se um anjo o chamasse” (Queirós, 1902/2002, Chapter V). This celestial imagery complicates Todorov’s categories because the supernatural event can simultaneously be interpreted as miraculous intervention, psychological redemption, or divine providence.

This moral dimension complicates Todorov’s theory because the fantastic in O Defunto does not merely generate epistemological uncertainty; it also points toward metaphysical meaning. The apparition of the dead figure functions simultaneously as Gothic horror and sacred sign. The supernatural therefore becomes ethically charged.

Scholars examining Queirós’s fantastic fiction have often observed that his narratives combine irony, realism, and spiritual symbolism. Vera Lúcia Silva (2007) argues that Queirós frequently employs fantastic discourse to explore deeper tensions within modern society, religion, and psychological consciousness. In O Defunto, supernatural ambiguity ultimately reveals anxieties concerning sin, guilt, divine judgment, and redemption.

This moral and symbolic complexity also resonates with Kazinczy’s literary ideals. For Kazinczy (n.d.), literature possessed ethical and cultural functions beyond entertainment. Artistic beauty contributed to the refinement of human sensibility and moral awareness. O Defunto fulfills this ideal by transforming a tale of death and jealousy into a meditation on transcendence and spiritual accountability.

Conclusion

A combined Todorovian and Kazinczyan reading of O Defunto demonstrates the richness and complexity of Eça de Queirós’s short fiction. Through Todorov’s theory of the fantastic, the story emerges as a narrative structured around hesitation, ambiguity, and epistemological instability. The reader remains suspended between rational explanation and supernatural belief, thereby experiencing the essential uncertainty that defines the fantastic genre. Queirós achieves this effect through limited perception, Gothic atmosphere, psychological tension, and unresolved supernatural phenomena.

At the same time, Kazinczy’s aesthetic principles illuminate the stylistic sophistication of the narrative. The power of O Defunto lies not solely in its supernatural content but in the artistic refinement of its language and atmosphere. Queirós transforms Gothic motifs into aesthetically controlled literary expressions marked by elegance, symbolic resonance, and emotional nuance.

Additional scholars such as Roger Caillois (1966), Louis Vax (1965), Irène Bessière (1974), and David Roas (2011) further reinforce the understanding of fantastic literature as a mode that destabilizes reality while revealing deeper cultural and psychological anxieties. In Queirós’s story, the fantastic becomes not merely a literary device but a means of exploring morality, faith, fear, and transcendence.

Ultimately, O Defunto remains suspended between supernatural mystery and spiritual transcendence. The final reference to rulers “por quem Deus operou grandes feitos sobre a terra e sobre o mar” (Queirós, 1902/2002, Chapter V) reinforces the narrative’s unresolved oscillation between divine miracle and fantastic uncertainty. Through this ambiguity, Queirós creates a story that  demonstrates that Queirós cannot be confined exclusively to realism. His fiction frequently traverses the borders between realism, Gothic narrative, religious symbolism, and the fantastic. Through the convergence of Todorov’s structural ambiguity and Kazinczy’s aesthetic refinement, the story reveals itself as a carefully crafted meditation on death, uncertainty, and the mysterious permeability between the visible and invisible worlds.

San José, Costa Rica

Friday, May 29, 2026


 

📚 References

Bessière, I. (1974). Le récit fantastique: La poétique de l’incertain. Larousse.

Bolongaro, E. (2014). The fluidity of the fantastic: Todorov’s legacy to literary criticism. Ticontre. Teoria Testo Traduzione, 1, 25–38. https://doi.org/10.15168/t3.v1i1.18

Caillois, R. (1966). Au cœur du fantastique. Gallimard.

Herrero Cecilia, J. (2016). Sobre los aspectos fundamentales de la estética del género fantástico y su evolución desde lo fantástico “romántico” a lo fantástico “posmoderno”. Çédille: Revista de Estudios Franceses, 6, 15–51. https://www.ull.es/revistas/index.php/cedille/article/view/1227

Kazinczy, F. (n.d.). Literary and linguistic writings. Retrieved from https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ferenc-Kazinczy

Lopes, A. C. C. V., & Siqueira, A. M. A. (2018). A representação do “milagre” em “Natal na barca” e “O defunto”: Diferentes manifestações literárias do insólito. Raído, 12(29), 98–112. https://doi.org/10.30612/raido.v12i29.7767

Matos, X. A. (2020). Eça de Queirós contista: O gótico nas narrativas “A aia”, “O tesouro” e “O defunto”. Em Tese, 25(1), 210–222. https://periodicos.ufmg.br/index.php/emt/article/view/31551

Queirós, E. de. (2002). Contos. Livros do Brasil.

Roas, D. (2011). Tras los límites de lo real: Una definición de lo fantástico. Páginas de Espuma.

Silva, V. L. (2007). O fantástico em O Mandarim, de Eça de Queirós. Uniletras, 29(1), 89–102. https://revistas.uepg.br/index.php/uniletras/article/view/198

Todorov, T. (1975). The fantastic: A structural approach to a literary genre (R. Howard, Trans.). Cornell University Press. https://openlibrary.org/books/OL5304664M/The_fantastic

Vax, L. (1965). L’art et la littérature fantastiques. Presses Universitaires de France.

 

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Between the Fantastic and the Aesthetic: A Todorovian and Kazinczyan Reading of Eça de Queirós’s O Defunto by Jonathan Acuña



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Friday, May 29, 2026


Location: San José, Curridabat, Freses, Costa Rica

Timing of Correction in ELT: Immediate and Delayed Feedback in Theory and Practice

CLT, Corrective Feedback, Error Correction, Focus on Form, Noticing Hypothesis, Output Hypothesis, TBLT, Timing of Correction 1comments

 

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

Introductory Note to the Reader

     Throughout the years, and especially through reflective journaling on my own teaching practice, I have often wondered when the best moment to provide feedback to learners truly is. Experience has taught me that what works effectively for one group of students may not necessarily work for another. For this reason, understanding the dynamics, personalities, and communicative needs of a particular class becomes essential when deciding how and when to intervene.

     As language teachers, we constantly seek the delicate balance between helping learners improve and preserving the spontaneity that meaningful communication requires. The scholars discussed in this paper helped me better understand that effective correction is not simply a matter of identifying errors, but of recognizing when feedback can support learning without becoming intrusive. I hope the reflections presented here encourage other educators to examine their own corrective practices with the same spirit of inquiry.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Timing of Correction in ELT: Immediate and Delayed Feedback in Theory and Practice

 

Abstract

The timing of corrective feedback remains a central concern in English Language Teaching (ELT), particularly within communicative methodologies that prioritize meaningful interaction and learner autonomy. This paper examines the pedagogical and theoretical implications of immediate versus delayed correction through the work of Long (1991), Ellis (2001, 2008), and Swain (1985, 2005). The discussion explores how the timing of feedback influences learner fluency, confidence, noticing, and classroom participation. Immediate correction is analyzed as particularly appropriate during controlled, accuracy-oriented activities, whereas delayed feedback is presented as a strategic option during communicative tasks where meaning takes precedence over form. The paper further examines practical classroom techniques such as post-task feedback boards, reformulation, reflective pauses, and focus-on-form episodes. By integrating insights from Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT), the discussion demonstrates that effective correction depends not only on what is corrected but also on when feedback is delivered. Ultimately, the paper argues that principled decisions regarding corrective timing can help teachers balance accuracy, fluency, learner confidence, and opportunities for interlanguage development.

Keywords:

Corrective Feedback, Timing of Correction, Focus on Form, Noticing Hypothesis, Output Hypothesis, CLT, TBLT

 

 

Resumen

La temporalidad de la retroalimentación correctiva constituye una de las decisiones pedagógicas más importantes en la enseñanza del inglés como lengua extranjera. Este artículo analiza las implicaciones teóricas y prácticas de la corrección inmediata y diferida a partir de los aportes de Long (1991), Ellis (2001, 2008) y Swain (1985, 2005). Se examina cómo el momento en que se proporciona la corrección influye en la fluidez, la confianza, la participación y la capacidad de los estudiantes para notar discrepancias en su producción lingüística. Asimismo, se exploran estrategias como la retroalimentación posterior a la tarea, la reformulación y las pausas reflexivas dentro de los enfoques comunicativos. El análisis concluye que una corrección eficaz depende tanto del contenido de la retroalimentación como del momento en que esta se ofrece, permitiendo equilibrar precisión lingüística, comunicación significativa y desarrollo de la interlengua.

 

 

Resumo

O momento da correção constitui uma das decisões pedagógicas mais importantes no ensino de inglês como língua estrangeira. Este artigo examina as implicações teóricas e práticas da correção imediata e da correção tardia com base nas contribuições de Long (1991), Ellis (2001, 2008) e Swain (1985, 2005). A discussão explora como o momento da retroalimentação influencia a fluência, a confiança, a participação e a capacidade dos aprendizes de perceber lacunas em sua produção linguística. Além disso, são analisadas estratégias como feedback pós-tarefa, reformulação e pausas reflexivas dentro das abordagens comunicativas. O estudo conclui que uma correção eficaz depende não apenas do conteúdo do feedback, mas também do momento em que ele é oferecido, permitindo equilibrar precisão linguística, comunicação significativa e desenvolvimento da interlíngua.

 


Introduction

Few pedagogical decisions are as delicate as determining when to correct a language learner. In communicative ELT classrooms, interruption may safeguard accuracy but disrupt fluency. Conversely, withholding correction may preserve confidence while allowing inaccuracies to persist and go unnoticed by the student. The issue is not whether to correct, but when correction most effectively promotes acquisition without undermining communication.

Within second language acquisition (SLA) research, timing has been linked to noticing, interlanguage development, and affective engagement. Michael Long’s influential proposal of focus on form shifted the conversation away from isolated grammar instruction toward contextualized attention to language during communication or speech events. Long (1991) defined focus on form as occurring when “learners’ attention is drawn to linguistic elements as they arise incidentally in lessons whose overriding focus is on meaning or communication” (p. 45). This definition inherently raises the question of timing: at what moment should attention be drawn toward mistakes made by the learner?

Rod Ellis (2001) similarly emphasizes that instructional decisions regarding feedback must consider classroom goals. He explains that “form-focused instruction can be planned or incidental” (p. 2), suggesting that correction may occur either immediately during interaction or later in a reflective phase. Meanwhile, Merrill Swain’s (1985) Output Hypothesis highlights the importance of learners recognizing gaps in their knowledge. Swain argues that producing language may prompt learners to notice what they cannot yet express, stating that “learners may notice a gap between what they want to say and what they can say” (Swain, 1985, p. 249). Timing, therefore, directly influences whether such noticing occurs.

This paper explores immediate and delayed correction through theoretical and pedagogical lenses, addressing key questions relevant to practicing teachers.

Why Timing Matters: Fluency, Confidence, and Noticing

The timing of correction directly affects three critical variables in language learning: fluency, confidence, and noticing. Immediate interruption during a communicative task can disrupt the learner’s cognitive processes involved in meaning negotiation with other peers or with the instructor. However, delayed feedback may weaken the connection between error and correction if too much time passes.

Ellis (2008) reminds educators that “there is no guarantee that corrective feedback will result in learning” (p. 963). This caution underscores the importance of strategic timing when correction is needed. Feedback given at the wrong moment may either overwhelm the learner or go simply unnoticed making the student continue making the same kind of mistake repeatedly.

Swain’s Output Hypothesis provides further clarity. She argues that output serves not only to practice language but also to trigger metalinguistic reflection. As Swain (2005) explains, “producing language pushes learners to process language more deeply” (p. 471). If correction is immediate and intrusive, learners may shift attention away from meaning and toward anxiety. If correction is properly delayed and framed reflectively, learners may engage more cognitively with the feedback.

Should Errors Be Corrected During Meaning-Focused Communication?

This question lies at the heart of communicative pedagogy. Long’s (1991) focus on form suggests that attention to linguistic elements should occur within communicative contexts but without transforming the lesson into decontextualized grammar instruction. He writes that focus on form “overtly draws students’ attention to linguistic elements as they arise incidentally in lessons whose overriding focus is on meaning” (Long, 1991, p. 45).

The phrase “as they arise” does not necessarily imply immediate interruption of student interventions in class. Rather, it allows for teacher judgment and for deciding when to intervene. In highly fluency-oriented tasks, such as debates, role plays, sketchpads, or problem-solving activities, immediate correction may fragment discourse and reduce learner risk-taking. In contrast, brief recasts or clarification requests that minimally interrupt communication may be appropriate.

Ellis (2001) notes that incidental focus on form can occur “reactively, in response to problems in comprehension or production” (p. 16). The key criterion is whether the error impedes intelligibility or not. If communication breaks down, immediate intervention may be necessary. If meaning remains clear, delayed feedback may better preserve fluency.

Activities That Require Accuracy-Focused Feedback

Not all classroom activities that we teachers plan prioritize meaning equally. Controlled practice, such as substitution drills, guided dialogues, or form-focused exercises, requires immediate feedback because accuracy is the explicit objective. In such contexts, delayed correction may allow incorrect forms to become reinforced.

Ellis (2008) emphasizes that form-focused instruction aims to “direct learners’ attention to specific linguistic features” (p. 308). When the goal of an activity is mastery of a specific grammatical structure or pronunciation feature, immediate correction supports proceduralization. Thus, timing should align with instructional purpose:

·        

Controlled practice → Immediate correction

·        

Semi-controlled activities → Selective, brief intervention

·        

Free communicative tasks → Delayed feedback

This alignment ensures coherence between objectives and feedback strategies.

Affective Factors and Timing

Correction timing also intersects with affective variables, which need to be taken care of by the teacher. Although the Affective Filter Hypothesis is not the primary focus of this essay, it remains relevant to classroom dynamics. Immediate correction during spontaneous speech may increase self-consciousness, particularly among lower-proficiency learners affecting student oral production by opting not to participate in speaking activities.

Swain (1985) acknowledges that output tasks can generate cognitive strain, but she maintains that such strain is productive when learners are supported appropriately by the instructor. She states that “comprehensible output may provide the opportunity for meaningful hypothesis testing” (p. 252). If correction is delivered respectfully and strategically, it can facilitate language consolidation rather than hinder students’ confidence.

For this reason, delayed feedback sessions, especially when conducted collectively on a board without naming individual students, can reduce personal embarrassment while promoting noticing of mistakes made during a communication task. This approach preserves learner dignity while still addressing interlanguage development and helping students with their language accuracy and performance.

Pedagogical Strategies for Managing Timing

Effective teachers operationalize timing through structured techniques rather than improvisation. Several practical strategies align with SLA research:

1. Immediate Correction in Controlled Practice

·        

Explicit correction or elicitation

·        

Brief metalinguistic explanation

·        

Prompted self-correction

2. Delayed Feedback in Communicative Tasks

·        

Post-task feedback boards listing anonymized sentences

·        

Reformulation of learner utterances

·        

Reflective pauses after task completion

·        

Peer-editing discussions

Ellis (2001) describes focus on form as potentially “planned or incidental” (p. 2). Post-task feedback boards represent planned focus on form following incidental communicative interaction. They preserve fluency while creating structured opportunities for noticing and for prompting learners to take control over their learning and language correction.

Timing Within CLT and TBLT

Within Communicative Language Teaching (CLT), maintaining interactional flow is paramount. Immediate correction is minimal and typically indirect. In Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT), however, timing is more systematically structured. A typical TBLT cycle includes:

 

1.    Pre-task preparation

2.    Task performance

3.    Post-task focus on form

The post-task stage provides the ideal moment for delayed correction. Learners first complete the communicative objective, then analyze language use reflectively and critically on their performance.

Long’s framework supports this sequencing, as focus on form occurs within communicative contexts but does not dominate them. Ellis (2008) reinforces this integration, noting that “form-focused instruction can be integrated into communicative activities without detracting from their communicative value” (p. 310).

Integrating Noticing and Reflection

Ultimately, the goal of timing decisions is to promote noticing. Swain (2005) emphasizes that learners benefit when they become aware of discrepancies in their output. She writes that “output pushes learners to move from semantic processing to syntactic processing” (Swain, 2005, p. 473). Delayed correction sessions create space for this deeper processing.

Reflective pauses, where students compare original utterances with reformulated versions, encourage metalinguistic awareness without sacrificing communicative momentum. Timing, therefore, is not merely procedural but cognitive.

Conclusion

The timing of corrective feedback is a pedagogical decision grounded in SLA theory and classroom sensitivity. Immediate correction serves accuracy-focused practice, while delayed feedback preserves fluency and supports reflective noticing during communicative tasks. Long’s concept of focus on form, Ellis’s framework of planned and incidental instruction, and Swain’s Output Hypothesis collectively demonstrate that correction is most effective when strategically timed.

Teachers must therefore ask not only what to correct, but when correction will most effectively support interlanguage development. In communicative classrooms, principled timing enables educators to balance accuracy, fluency, and affective well-being.

Correction, then, is not an interruption of communication; it is a carefully positioned moment within it.

San José, Costa Rica

Sunday, May 24, 2026

 

📚 References

Ellis, R. (2001). Investigating form-focused instruction. Language Learning, 51(S1), 1–46.

Ellis, R. (2008). The study of second language acquisition (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press.

Long, M. H. (1991). Focus on form: A design feature in language teaching methodology. In K. de Bot et al. (Eds.), Foreign language research in cross-cultural perspective (pp. 39–52). John Benjamins.

Swain, M. (1985). Communicative competence: Some roles of comprehensible input and comprehensible output. In S. Gass & C. Madden (Eds.), Input in second language acquisition (pp. 235–253). Newbury House.

Swain, M. (2005). The output hypothesis: Theory and research. In E. Hinkel (Ed.), Handbook of research in second language teaching and learning (pp. 471–483). Lawrence Erlbaum.

 

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Sunday, May 24, 2026


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