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From Epic Return to Existential Dissatisfaction: A Comparative Reading of Homer’s Odyssey and Eça de Queirós’s A Perfeição

Decadence, Desire, Dialogism, Eça de Queirós, Homer, Intertextuality, Modernity, Mythology, Odysseus, Reception Theory 0 comments

 

Calypso & Odysseus
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in June 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     My interest in Greek mythology began during my teenage years. I vividly remember spending hours reading the mythological sections of the encyclopedia collection my mother kept at home for us. Those stories of gods, heroes, monsters, and tragic destinies awakened in me a fascination with the ancient world that would remain through the years.

     Around that same period, my sister had been assigned to read The Odyssey in high school. The book remained somewhere in our home gathering dust after she had finished it, and out of curiosity I decided to read it myself. I greatly enjoyed the experience. The figure of Odysseus, wandering through strange lands while longing for Ithaca, immediately captured my imagination. Later, as a freshman in college taking a World Literature course, I would finally read The Iliad, which deepened my appreciation for Greek epic and classical storytelling.

     Years afterward, when I encountered Eça de Queirós’s retelling of the Odysseus myth in A Perfeição, I was struck by the radically different perspective through which the ancient hero was portrayed. The story transformed the epic figure of Odysseus into something more psychologically complex, existentially restless, and profoundly modern. Queirós’s reinterpretation made me reflect on how myths survive across centuries not by remaining static, but by allowing each generation to reinterpret them according to its own anxieties, philosophies, and understanding of human nature.

     That personal fascination and intellectual reflection ultimately inspired the present essay.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


From Epic Return to Existential Dissatisfaction: A Comparative Reading of Homer’s Odyssey and Eça de Queirós’s A Perfeição

 

Abstract

This essay explores the relationship between Homer’s Odyssey and Eça de Queirós’s short story A Perfeição through the theoretical perspectives of intertextuality, myth criticism, dialogism, reception theory, modernity, decadence, and psychoanalytic desire. While Homer presents Odysseus as the archetypal hero who rejects divine perfection in favor of mortal authenticity and homecoming, Queirós reinterprets the myth through a modern lens characterized by existential dissatisfaction and psychological instability. Drawing on the theories of Julia Kristeva, Northrop Frye, Mikhail Bakhtin, Hans Robert Jauss, Friedrich Nietzsche, Walter Benjamin, and Jacques Lacan, this essay argues that A Perfeição transforms the Homeric epic into a meditation on the impossibility of fulfillment and the restless nature of human desire. Ultimately, the essay demonstrates how Queirós demythologizes the classical hero and converts the ancient narrative into a modern exploration of incompleteness and existential ambiguity.

Keywords:

Intertextuality, Mythology, Odysseus, Homer, Eça De Queirós, Dialogism, Desire, Modernity, Decadence, Reception Theory

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo explora la relación entre La Odisea de Homero y el cuento A Perfeição de Eça de Queirós mediante las perspectivas teóricas de la intertextualidad, la crítica mítica, el dialogismo, la teoría de la recepción, la modernidad, la decadencia y el deseo psicoanalítico. Mientras Homero presenta a Odiseo como el héroe arquetípico que rechaza la perfección divina a favor de la autenticidad mortal y el regreso al hogar, Queirós reinterpreta el mito desde una visión moderna marcada por la insatisfacción existencial y la inestabilidad psicológica. A partir de las teorías de Julia Kristeva, Northrop Frye, Mikhail Bakhtin, Hans Robert Jauss, Friedrich Nietzsche, Walter Benjamin y Jacques Lacan, este ensayo sostiene que A Perfeição transforma la épica homérica en una reflexión sobre la imposibilidad de la plenitud y la naturaleza inquieta del deseo humano. Finalmente, el ensayo demuestra cómo Queirós desmitifica al héroe clásico y convierte la narrativa antigua en una exploración moderna de la incompletitud y la ambigüedad existencial.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio explora a relação entre a Odisseia de Homero e o conto A Perfeição de Eça de Queirós por meio das perspectivas teóricas da intertextualidade, da crítica mítica, do dialogismo, da teoria da recepção, da modernidade, da decadência e do desejo psicanalítico. Enquanto Homero apresenta Odisseu como o herói arquetípico que rejeita a perfeição divina em favor da autenticidade mortal e do retorno ao lar, Queirós reinterpreta o mito sob uma ótica moderna marcada pela insatisfação existencial e pela instabilidade psicológica. Com base nas teorias de Julia Kristeva, Northrop Frye, Mikhail Bakhtin, Hans Robert Jauss, Friedrich Nietzsche, Walter Benjamin e Jacques Lacan, este ensaio argumenta que A Perfeição transforma a epopeia homérica em uma reflexão sobre a impossibilidade da plenitude e sobre a natureza inquieta do desejo humano. Por fim, o ensaio demonstra como Queirós desmistifica o herói clássico e converte a narrativa antiga em uma exploração moderna da incompletude e da ambiguidade existencial.

 


Introduction

The persistence of classical mythology in modern literature demonstrates the extraordinary adaptability of ancient narratives to changing cultural, philosophical, and psychological concerns. Among the many myths that have survived through literary reinterpretation, the story of Ulysses and Calypso occupies a particularly important place in Western imagination. In The Odyssey, traditionally attributed to Homer, Ulysses remains trapped on the island of Ogygia, where the nymph Calypso offers him immortality, sensual pleasure, and eternal comfort. Nevertheless, the hero longs to return to Ithaca, embracing mortality, suffering, and human imperfection instead of divine permanence. Centuries later, Portuguese writer, Eça de Queirós revisits this episode in A Perfeição, transforming the classical myth into a modern reflection on dissatisfaction, existential instability, and the impossibility of fulfillment.

Rather than merely reproducing the Homeric narrative, Queirós rewrites it through irony and psychological complexity. His Ulysses is no longer simply the heroic voyager yearning for home; instead, he becomes a deeply restless individual incapable of enduring even paradise itself. The island ceases to function merely as a place of temptation and instead becomes a symbol of oppressive perfection. Through this reinterpretation, Queirós dismantles the heroic ideal associated with classical epic and replaces it with a modern consciousness marked by anxiety, contradiction, and existential incompleteness; Ulysses feels trapped in a mouse trap.

This essay argues that A Perfeição operates as a modern dialogic reinterpretation of The Odyssey in which heroic transcendence is replaced by psychological dissatisfaction and existential instability. Through the theoretical lenses of intertextuality, myth criticism, dialogism, reception theory, modernity and decadence, and psychoanalytic desire, this paper examines how Queirós transforms Homeric epic into a critique of perfection and an exploration of modern subjectivity.

Homeric Foundations: Ulysses and the Desire for Return

In The Odyssey, the episode of Ulysses and Calypso constitutes one of the central symbolic moments of the epic tradition. Ulysses resides on Ogygia for several years, surrounded by divine beauty and eternal comfort. Calypso offers the Greek hero from Ithaca immortality and freedom from human suffering. Yet despite these gifts, the hero constantly longs for the island Ithaca and Penelope, her Spartan wife. His desire for return, or nostos, defines his heroic identity.

The Homeric hero is characterized not by the pursuit of pleasure but by fidelity to home, memory, and human destiny. Ulysses chooses mortality over divine eternity because his humanity depends on struggle, limitation, and belonging. Homer’s narrative therefore establishes a clear opposition between divine perfection and authentic human existence. Ogygia functions simultaneously as paradise and prison, for perfection ultimately alienates Ulysses from his human condition.

According to Northrop Frye (1947), myths establish archetypal structures that continue to reappear throughout literary history. The Homeric Ulysses represents the archetype of the wandering hero whose journey toward home symbolizes spiritual and existential completion. The epic structure of the narrative reinforces ideals of perseverance, identity, and heroic endurance. Consequently, the original Homeric framework provides the mythic foundation upon which Queirós later constructs his revisionary interpretation.

At the same time, Homer’s narrative already contains tensions that modern writers would later expand. Although Ulysses desires return, he also experiences moments of hesitation, temptation, and emotional fragmentation throughout the epic. These ambiguities allow later authors to reinterpret the hero according to the concerns of their own historical periods. In this sense, the Homeric myth remains open to continual reinterpretation.

Intertextuality and Literary Rewriting

The relationship between Homer and Queirós can be productively understood through the concept of intertextuality developed by Julia Kristeva. Kristeva (1980) argues that every literary text emerges from a network of previous texts. Literature does not exist in isolation; rather, texts constantly absorb, transform, and reinterpret earlier narratives.

Viewed through this perspective, A Perfeição is not simply inspired by The Odyssey but actively engages in a dialogue with it. Queirós assumes that readers recognize the Homeric myth and intentionally manipulates expectations associated with heroic tradition. The reader approaches Ulysses expecting grandeur, perseverance, and moral certainty, yet Queirós gradually destabilizes these expectations.

The intertextual relationship becomes especially evident in the transformation of Ogygia itself. In Homer, the island is undoubtedly seductive but remains external to Ulysses’ authentic identity. In Queirós, however, the island acquires a more psychologically complex dimension. Perfection itself becomes intolerable. The protagonist’s dissatisfaction no longer emerges merely from separation from home but from an internal incapacity to experience fulfillment.

Kristeva’s theory helps explain why Queirós’s rewriting possesses such critical power. Because the modern text constantly echoes Homeric structures, readers perceive the distance between classical heroism and modern psychological fragmentation. Meaning emerges precisely from this tension between continuity and transformation. Queirós preserves the mythic skeleton of the Homeric narrative while simultaneously subverting its ideological foundations.

This intertextual strategy also reflects broader nineteenth-century literary tendencies. Modern writers frequently revisited classical myths not to glorify antiquity but to question inherited ideals. Myth became a mechanism for exposing the instability of modern identity. Through intertextual rewriting, Queirós transforms epic certainty into existential ambiguity.

Dialogism and the Conflict of Worldviews

The reinterpretation of Homer in Queirós can also be examined through the dialogic theory of Mikhail Bakhtin. Bakhtin (1981) argues that literary works function through the interaction of multiple voices and ideological perspectives. Texts are never monological; instead, they exist in dialogue with other texts, traditions, and worldviews.

In A Perfeição, two distinct visions of humanity confront one another: a) the classical worldview represented by Homeric heroism and b) the modern worldview characterized by skepticism and psychological instability. Queirós does not completely reject Homer but rather enters into dialogue with him. The ancient ideal of heroic fulfillment becomes questioned from within modern consciousness.

This dialogic tension becomes especially visible in the portrayal of Ulysses. In Homer, the hero’s desire for return possesses moral clarity. His suffering confirms his nobility. In Queirós, however, Ulysses appears emotionally contradictory. His restlessness no longer signifies heroic virtue but existential dissatisfaction. The heroic journey loses its transcendental meaning and becomes psychologically ambiguous.

Bakhtin’s (1981) concept of dialogism also illuminates the treatment of Calypso. In the Homeric narrative, she largely functions as an obstacle or temptation within the hero’s journey. Her emotional interiority remains secondary. Queirós, however, grants her greater psychological presence and vulnerability. As a result, the moral structure of the myth changes significantly. Ulysses’ departure no longer appears unquestionably heroic; instead, it may suggest emotional cruelty or inability to sustain intimacy.

The dialogic relationship between the two texts therefore generates a reinterpretation of values themselves. Homeric certainty encounters modern irony. Epic transcendence encounters psychological fragmentation. Through this literary dialogue, Queirós exposes the incompatibility between classical ideals and modern existential consciousness.

Myth Criticism and the Demythologizing of the Hero

Myth criticism provides another valuable framework for understanding Queirós’s transformation of the Homeric narrative. According to Frye (1957), literature repeatedly employs archetypal patterns derived from mythological structures. However, modern literature often modifies or reverses these archetypes in response to changing historical conditions.

In Homer, Ulysses exemplifies the archetypal hero whose journey culminates in reintegration and restoration. His return to Ithaca symbolizes the triumph of order over chaos and identity over fragmentation. The mythic structure affirms the coherence of the world and the meaningfulness of human perseverance.

Queirós, however, dismantles this archetypal certainty. His Ulysses no longer embodies harmonious reintegration but perpetual dissatisfaction. Rather than progressing toward existential completion, he appears trapped within an endless cycle of desire and restlessness. The mythic hero becomes psychologically unstable and spiritually incomplete.

This demythologizing process reflects broader tendencies within modern literature. As religious and metaphysical certainties weakened during the nineteenth century, writers increasingly questioned traditional heroic models. Myth no longer functioned as unquestioned truth but as material for reinterpretation and critique. Queirós participates in this literary movement by exposing the fragility of epic ideals under modern conditions.

Importantly, the title A Perfeição itself contains profound irony. Perfection, traditionally associated with divine harmony and fulfillment, becomes oppressive and unbearable. Ogygia transforms into a symbolic representation of existential suffocation. Ulysses does not flee suffering toward happiness; instead, he flees perfection itself. This reversal fundamentally alters the meaning of the myth. In Homer, paradise threatens heroic identity because it distracts Ulysses from his human obligations. In Queirós, paradise becomes intolerable because human desire itself depends upon incompleteness and movement. The hero cannot remain within perfection because desire ceases to exist once fulfillment becomes permanent.

Modernity, Decadence, and Existential Restlessness

The transformation of the Homeric myth in Queirós also reflects broader anxieties associated with modernity and decadence. Thinkers such as Friedrich Nietzsche and Walter Benjamin explored the spiritual instability and fragmentation characteristics of modern life. To start with, Nietzsche (1968) frequently critiques the exhaustion of traditional values and the crisis of meaning in modern civilization. His philosophy emphasizes the instability of identity and the perpetual tension between desire and fulfillment. Queirós’s Ulysses can be interpreted through this Nietzschean lens as a figure incapable of achieving stable satisfaction because modern consciousness itself is marked by internal contradiction.

The decadent atmosphere surrounding Ogygia also reflects “fin-de-siècle” sensibilities. The island represents aesthetic perfection carried to excess. Beauty, pleasure, and abundance gradually become sterile and oppressive. This corresponds closely to decadent literature’s fascination with exhaustion, ennui, and artificiality. Ulysses experiences not heroic suffering but existential boredom. Within this line of thinking, Benjamin (1969) similarly describes modernity as an experience of fragmentation and disconnection. And for this reason, traditional narratives of coherence collapse under modern conditions, leaving individuals psychologically displaced. Queirós’s reinterpretation of Ulysses reflects precisely this displacement. The Ithacan hero no longer possesses a stable relationship with destiny, home, or identity. His dissatisfaction becomes internalized and perpetual.

Unlike the Homeric hero, whose journey moves toward restoration, Queirós’s Ulysses appears condemned to endless movement without definitive fulfillment. His departure from Ogygia no longer guarantees meaning or completion. Instead, the narrative emphasizes instability itself as a defining feature of human existence. This modern reinterpretation profoundly alters the symbolic function of travel. In epic tradition, the voyage leads toward knowledge and reintegration. In Queirós, movement becomes symptomatic of existential inability to remain satisfied. The hero travels not because fulfillment awaits elsewhere but because permanence itself becomes unbearable.

Lacanian Desire and the Impossibility of Fulfillment

The psychological dimension of Queirós’s Ulysses can be further illuminated through the psychoanalytic theories of Jacques Lacan. Lacan (1977) argues that human desire is fundamentally structured around absence and lack. Desire can never achieve complete fulfillment because it depends precisely upon what remains unattainable. This Lacanian perspective offers a compelling explanation for Ulysses’ dissatisfaction in A Perfeição. Ogygia provides everything traditionally associated with happiness: beauty, pleasure, comfort, and permanence. Yet these very conditions eliminate the tension necessary for desire to continue functioning. Once perfection becomes stable and complete, desire collapses into emptiness.

From a Lacanian perspective, Ulysses cannot remain in paradise because human subjectivity itself depends upon incompleteness. The unattainable object of desire constantly shifts, preventing definitive satisfaction. Consequently, Ulysses’ longing for departure reflects not rational decision-making but the structural impossibility of fulfillment itself. This interpretation radically transforms the Homeric narrative. In Homer, Ulysses chooses mortality because of loyalty to home and identity. In Queirós, however, his departure may reveal a deeper psychological impossibility: the inability of human beings to endure permanent satisfaction.

Calypso’s tragedy also acquires new dimensions within this psychoanalytic framework. She attempts to offer total fulfillment, but such fulfillment proves incompatible with human desire. Her paradise fails precisely because it eliminates lack, movement, and incompleteness. The relationship between Calypso and Ulysses therefore becomes structurally doomed. In this line of thinking, Lacan’s theories help explain why the title “Perfection” operates ironically in Queirós’s narrative. Perfection (Perfeição) destroys the very conditions that sustain emotional and existential vitality. Human beings remain attached not to complete satisfaction but to the endless movement of desire itself. Queirós transforms the Homeric myth into an exploration of this fundamental psychological contradiction.

Reception Theory and the Modern Reader

The reinterpretation of Homer by Queirós can also be understood through the reception theory of Hans Robert Jauss. Jauss (1982) argues that literary meaning changes according to the historical expectations of readers. Each era rereads earlier texts through its own cultural and philosophical concerns. From this perspective, A Perfeição reflects a specifically modern reception of the Homeric myth. Ancient audiences likely interpreted Ulysses primarily as a heroic exemplar of perseverance and intelligence. Modern readers, however, approach the character through psychological and existential frameworks unavailable in classical antiquity.

Queirós’s rewriting therefore reveals how the myth evolves across historical periods. The same narrative structure acquires radically different meanings depending on cultural context. Heroic return becomes existential dissatisfaction. Divine temptation becomes psychological suffocation. Epic grandeur becomes irony and ambiguity. Reception theory also explains why Queirós’s version resonates strongly with modern sensibilities. The modern reader recognizes Ulysses’ dissatisfaction as psychologically plausible. Unlike the morally stable hero of epic tradition, Queirós’s protagonist reflects the fragmentation and uncertainty associated with modern identity.

Furthermore, Jauss (1982) emphasizes that literary history depends upon continual reinterpretation rather than static preservation. Classical myths survive precisely because they can be rewritten according to changing intellectual conditions. Queirós participates in this dynamic process by transforming Homeric material into a critique of modern existential instability. The relationship between the two texts therefore should not be understood hierarchically. Homer provides the mythic foundation, but Queirós generates new meanings through reinterpretation. The value of the modern text lies not in “fidelity” to the original but in its capacity to reveal “previously unexplored dimensions” of the myth.

Conclusion

The relationship between The Odyssey and A Perfeição demonstrates the extraordinary capacity of classical mythology to undergo continual reinterpretation across historical periods. While Homer presents Ulysses as the archetypal hero who rejects divine perfection in favor of human authenticity, Queirós transforms the same narrative into a modern meditation on dissatisfaction, existential instability, and the impossibility of fulfillment.

Through intertextuality, Queirós enters into critical dialogue with the Homeric tradition, preserving its narrative foundations while simultaneously subverting its ideological assumptions. The heroic certainty of epic literature is replaced by psychological ambiguity and existential restlessness. Ulysses no longer appears as a stable moral exemplar but as a fragmented modern subject incapable of enduring even paradise itself.

Theoretical perspectives from Kristeva, Frye, Bakhtin, Jauss, Nietzsche, Benjamin, and Lacan illuminate different dimensions of this transformation. Intertextuality reveals the dynamic relationship between classical and modern texts. Myth criticism explains the demythologizing of heroic archetypes. Dialogism exposes the ideological tension between epic transcendence and modern skepticism. Reception theory demonstrates how myths acquire new meanings across historical contexts. Nietzsche and Benjamin help contextualize the narrative within modernity and decadence, while Lacan explains the psychological impossibility of permanent fulfillment.

Ultimately, Queirós’s reinterpretation of Ulysses reflects a profound shift in Western literary consciousness. In Homer, suffering results from separation from home and identity. In Queirós, suffering emerges from the impossibility of satisfaction itself. This transformation marks the movement from classical epic certainty toward modern existential ambiguity.

Rather than diminishing the Homeric myth, Queirós’s rewriting demonstrates its continuing vitality. The enduring power of mythology lies precisely in its ability to generate new meanings in response to changing philosophical and psychological realities. Through A Perfeição, the ancient voyage of Ulysses becomes not merely a journey toward home but an exploration of the modern human condition itself.

San José, Costa Rica

Friday, June 5, 2026


 

📚 References

Bakhtin, Mikhail. (1981). The dialogic imagination: Four essays (M. Holquist, Ed.; C. Emerson & M. Holquist, Trans.). University of Texas Press.

Benjamin, Walter. (1969). Illuminations (H. Arendt, Ed.; H. Zohn, Trans.). Schocken Books.

Frye, Northrop. (1957). Anatomy of criticism: Four essays. Princeton University Press.

Homer. (1996). The Odyssey (R. Fagles, Trans.). Penguin Books. (Original work published ca. 8th century BCE)

Jauss, Hans Robert. (1982). Toward an aesthetic of reception (T. Bahti, Trans.). University of Minnesota Press.

Kristeva, Julia. (1980). Desire in language: A semiotic approach to literature and art (L. S. Roudiez, Ed.; T. Gora, A. Jardine, & L. S. Roudiez, Trans.). Columbia University Press.

Lacan, Jacques. (1977). Écrits: A selection (A. Sheridan, Trans.). W. W. Norton.

Nietzsche, Friedrich. (1968). The will to power (W. Kaufmann & R. J. Hollingdale, Trans.). Vintage Books.

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


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From Epic Return to Existential Dissatisfaction by Jonathan Acuña



Take a moment to tune in to the podcast version of this article and experience these ideas from a fresh perspective. Whether you are listening during a quiet moment, on your commute, or while enjoying a cup of coffee, I hope this conversation inspires reflection, curiosity, and new insights along the way.

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Friday, June 05, 2026


Location: San José, Curridabat, Freses, Costa Rica

Types of Corrective Feedback in ELT: Balancing Interaction, Accuracy, and Learner Autonomy

Corrective Feedback, Elicitation, ELT, Interlanguage, Learner Uptake, Metalinguistic Feedback, Noticing, Recasts 0 comments

 

Feedback types in language learning
AI-generated illustration by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in May 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     This is my third essay on corrective feedback, and I strongly believe the topic is still far from being fully explored for teachers who genuinely wish to deepen their understanding of language learning and classroom interaction.

     My interest in this area became even stronger after a meaningful conversation with one of my colleagues and peers, Mark Cormier, at Centro Cultural Costarricense Norteamericano in Costa Rica. During our discussion, we both agreed that teachers need more than intuition when correcting learners; they need practical and research-informed corrective tools that help students improve their linguistic performance without discouraging communication or confidence.

     As I continued reflecting on my own teaching practice, I realized that corrective feedback is much more complex than simply pointing out errors. It involves timing, noticing, learner psychology, interaction, and the delicate balance between fluency and accuracy. The scholars discussed throughout this essay helped me better understand that not all corrective techniques generate the same level of learner engagement or reflection. More importantly, they reminded me that effective correction should empower learners to notice, rethink, and reconstruct their own language systems rather than merely receive answers passively.

     I hope this paper encourages other educators to continue reflecting critically on how feedback is delivered in communicative classrooms and how corrective practices can become developmental rather than merely evaluative.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Types of Corrective Feedback in ELT: Balancing Interaction, Accuracy, and Learner Autonomy

 

Abstract

Corrective feedback constitutes one of the most significant mechanisms through which language learners become aware of gaps in their interlanguage system. However, not all feedback types promote acquisition in the same way, nor do they affect learner autonomy, fluency, and noticing equally. This paper examines major types of corrective feedback in English Language Teaching (ELT), drawing primarily on the work of Lyster and Ranta (1997), Lyster (2004), and Ellis, Loewen, and Erlam (2006). The discussion explores explicit correction, recasts, clarification requests, elicitation, repetition, and metalinguistic feedback within communicative and task-based pedagogies. Particular attention is given to learner uptake, self-repair, and the role of noticing in second language acquisition (SLA). The paper argues that corrective feedback should not be viewed merely as error treatment but as a strategic pedagogical tool that fosters learner reflection and interlanguage development. Ultimately, principled use of feedback types enables teachers to balance communicative interaction with opportunities for linguistic growth.

Keywords:

Corrective Feedback, Learner Uptake, Recasts, Elicitation, Metalinguistic Feedback, Noticing, Interlanguage, ELT

 

 

Resumen

La retroalimentación correctiva constituye uno de los mecanismos más significativos mediante los cuales los estudiantes de lenguas toman conciencia de las brechas existentes en su sistema de interlengua. Sin embargo, no todos los tipos de retroalimentación promueven la adquisición de la misma manera, ni afectan de igual forma la autonomía del estudiante, la fluidez y la capacidad de notar discrepancias lingüísticas. Este artículo examina los principales tipos de retroalimentación correctiva en la Enseñanza del Inglés como Lengua Extranjera (ELT), basándose principalmente en los trabajos de Lyster y Ranta (1997), Lyster (2004) y Ellis, Loewen y Erlam (2006). La discusión explora la corrección explícita, las reformulaciones, las solicitudes de aclaración, la elicitación, la repetición y la retroalimentación metalingüística dentro de pedagogías comunicativas y basadas en tareas. Se presta especial atención a la respuesta del estudiante ante la corrección, la autocorrección y el papel de la percepción consciente en la adquisición de una segunda lengua (SLA). El artículo sostiene que la retroalimentación correctiva no debe considerarse únicamente como tratamiento del error, sino como una herramienta pedagógica estratégica que fomenta la reflexión del estudiante y el desarrollo de la interlengua. En última instancia, el uso fundamentado de los distintos tipos de retroalimentación permite a los docentes equilibrar la interacción comunicativa con oportunidades para el crecimiento lingüístico.

 

 

Resumo

O feedback corretivo constitui um dos mecanismos mais significativos pelos quais os aprendizes de línguas tomam consciência das lacunas existentes em seu sistema de interlíngua. Entretanto, nem todos os tipos de feedback promovem a aquisição da mesma forma, nem afetam igualmente a autonomia do aprendiz, a fluência e a capacidade de perceber discrepâncias linguísticas. Este artigo examina os principais tipos de feedback corretivo no Ensino de Inglês como Língua Estrangeira (ELT), baseando-se principalmente nos trabalhos de Lyster e Ranta (1997), Lyster (2004) e Ellis, Loewen e Erlam (2006). A discussão explora a correção explícita, os recasts, os pedidos de esclarecimento, a elicitação, a repetição e o feedback metalinguístico dentro de pedagogias comunicativas e baseadas em tarefas. Atenção especial é dada ao uptake do aprendiz, à autocorreção e ao papel da percepção consciente na aquisição de segunda língua (SLA). O artigo argumenta que o feedback corretivo não deve ser visto apenas como tratamento do erro, mas como uma ferramenta pedagógica estratégica que promove a reflexão do aprendiz e o desenvolvimento da interlíngua. Em última análise, o uso fundamentado dos diferentes tipos de feedback permite aos professores equilibrar a interação comunicativa com oportunidades de crescimento linguístico.

 


Introduction

Corrective feedback remains central to second and foreign language pedagogy because it provides learners with opportunities to notice discrepancies between their production (interlanguage) and target-language norms (language used by native speakers). Yet corrective feedback is far from uniform. Teachers may reformulate a learner’s utterance indirectly, explicitly provide the correct form, prompt self-correction, or request clarification. Each feedback type carries distinct cognitive, affective, and pedagogical consequences.

Within communicative methodologies such as Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) and Task-Based Language Teaching (TBLT), the challenge lies in correcting language without undermining interaction and student confidence. Consequently, researchers have increasingly focused not simply on whether feedback works, but on which kinds of feedback promote noticing, learner uptake, and long-term acquisition.

Lyster and Ranta’s (1997) seminal study on classroom interaction fundamentally shaped this discussion. They defined corrective feedback as “any reaction of the teacher which clearly transforms, disapprovingly refers to, or demands improvement of the learner utterance” (p. 46). Their taxonomy of feedback types remains one of the most influential frameworks in SLA research.

This paper explores major types of corrective feedback and their implications for classroom practice. It argues that effective feedback is not merely corrective but developmental, encouraging learners to engage actively with their evolving interlanguage systems.

Corrective Feedback and the Role of Noticing

It cannot be doubted that corrective feedback is deeply connected to the concept of noticing in SLA. We teachers need to understand that learners do not automatically acquire forms simply because they are exposed to them in class, in textbooks, in material they are interacting with. Rather, acquisition often depends on becoming consciously aware of discrepancies between intended and actual production, or between the foreign language structures and the mother tongue’s grammar.

Ellis, Loewen, and Erlam (2006) argue that “corrective feedback works by helping learners notice the gap between their own erroneous production and the target language form” (p. 340). This “gap” becomes a site of cognitive engagement where learners reevaluate hypotheses about language structure. Importantly, not all feedback types generate the same degree of noticing among learnrs. Some feedback is highly explicit, while other forms remain implicit and may go unnoticed altogether. The effectiveness of corrective feedback therefore depends partly on how visible the correction becomes to learners.

Recasts: Implicit Reformulation

Among the most common feedback strategies is the recast. A recast occurs when a teacher reformulates a learner’s incorrect utterance while preserving its meaning. For example:

 

Learner: He go to school yesterday.
Teacher: Oh, he went to school yesterday?

 

Recasts are popular because they maintain conversational flow and minimize embarrassment. However, their implicit nature raises concerns regarding learner awareness. For instances, Lyster and Ranta (1997) observed that “recasts provided learners with reformulations of their non-target output without overtly signaling that an error had been committed” (p. 47). For this reason, teachers need to be in the lookout if recasts resemble ordinary conversational responses, learners may interpret them as confirmation rather than correction by the instructor.

Nevertheless, recasts remain valuable in fluency-oriented communicative tasks where interruption must be minimized. In CLT and TBLT classrooms, recasts allow teachers to preserve interaction while subtly modeling accurate forms.

Explicit Correction

Explicit correction involves directly indicating that an error has occurred and providing the correct form. Unlike recasts, this strategy leaves little ambiguity.

For example:

 

Learner: She don’t like coffee.
Teacher: Not “don’t.” We say “doesn’t.”

 

Explicit correction facilitates clear noticing because learners immediately recognize the corrective intent. Ellis, Loewen, and Erlam (2006) note that “explicit feedback supplies learners with clear information regarding the incorrectness of their utterance” (p. 354).

Although explicit correction can be very effective for accuracy-focused instruction, overuse of this technique may threaten learner confidence in communicative contexts. Teachers must therefore consider proficiency level, classroom atmosphere, and task objective before employing highly direct correction.

Clarification Requests

Another technique is clarification requests that prompt learners to reconsider their utterance by signaling misunderstanding or communicative difficulty. Examples of this corrective action include interactions like the ones below where the teacher uses one of these following questions asking for clarification:

 

Teacher: “Sorry?”

Teacher: “What do you mean?”

Teacher: “Can you say that again?”

 

Unlike explicit correction, clarification requests encourage learners to self-monitor. Lyster and Ranta (1997) explain that clarification requests “indicate to learners either that their utterance has been misunderstood or that the utterance is ill-formed” (p. 47). This strategy aligns closely with communicative methodologies because it preserves interaction while fostering learner autonomy. Rather than supplying the answer immediately, the teacher creates opportunities for self-repair.

Elicitation and Prompting

Elicitation occurs when teachers strategically pause or prompt learners to produce the correct form themselves. For example:

 

Teacher: “Yesterday he…?”

Teacher: “Can you try that again using the past tense?”

 

Lyster (2004) strongly advocates prompts such as elicitation because they encourage deeper cognitive processing. He argues that “prompts provide opportunities for learners to self-repair by generating target reformulations” (Lyster, 2004, p. 404).

This distinction is significant because student self-generated repair may strengthen retention more effectively than teacher-provided correction. Prompts transform learners from passive recipients of feedback into active participants in the correction process of ill-formed utterances.

Metalinguistic Feedback

Metalinguistic feedback provides comments, questions, or clues related to grammatical structure without directly supplying the answer. Examples of this other technique include:

 

Teacher: “Remember subject-verb agreement.”

Teacher: “What tense should we use for yesterday?”

 

This strategy promotes learner analytical reflection and metalinguistic awareness. Ellis, Loewen, and Erlam (2006) emphasize that metalinguistic feedback “encourages learners to reflect consciously on linguistic form” (p. 356).

Because metalinguistic feedback requires learners to retrieve forms independently, it is especially useful with intermediate and advanced learners capable of engaging in explicit grammatical reasoning.

Repetition as Corrective Feedback

In similar language teaching scenarios, instructors may also repeat the learner’s erroneous utterance with altered intonation to highlight the problem.

Example:

 

Learner: She go every day.
Teacher: She GO every day?

 

This technique draws attention to error without directly providing correction. According to Lyster and Ranta (1997), repetition “isolates the learner’s error and highlights it through emphasis” (p. 48).

Repetition is particularly effective when learners are capable of immediate self-correction but require a prompt to notice an ill-formed structure issue.

Learner Uptake and Self-Repair

One of the most important concepts in corrective feedback research is learner uptake. Uptake refers to the learner’s immediate response following feedback. Lyster and Ranta (1997) define uptake as “a student’s utterance that immediately follows the teacher’s feedback and that constitutes a reaction in some way to the teacher’s intention to draw attention to some aspect of the student’s initial utterance” (p. 49).

Importantly, not all feedback generates uptake equally. Research suggests that prompts and elicitation frequently produce higher levels of self-repair than recasts because learners must actively modify their own output. This finding aligns with socio-cognitive views of SLA, where acquisition is strengthened through active participation rather than passive reception.

Corrective Feedback in CLT and TBLT

Within either CLT or TBLT classrooms, corrective feedback must balance communicative flow with attention to form.

Feedback Type

Communicative Impact

Learner Involvement

Best Context

Recasts

Minimal interruption

Low

Fluency tasks

Explicit correction

High interruption

Moderate

Accuracy practice

Clarification requests

Moderate interruption

High

Interactive speaking

Elicitation

Moderate interruption

Very high

Guided production

Metalinguistic feedback

Moderate interruption

High analytical reflection

Intermediate / advanced learners

Repetition

Minimal to moderate interruption

Moderate

Oral interaction

This comparison demonstrates that no single feedback type is universally superior. Effectiveness depends on timing, proficiency level, task objective, and learner readiness.

Conclusion

Corrective feedback is not merely a classroom management technique but a fundamental component of interlanguage development. As Lyster, Ranta, and Ellis demonstrate, different feedback types generate different levels of noticing, uptake, and learner engagement.

Implicit feedback such as recasts preserves communicative flow, while prompts and metalinguistic feedback encourage deeper learner reflection and self-repair. Consequently, effective teachers must move beyond the simplistic question of whether to correct and instead ask which feedback strategy best supports acquisition in a particular context.

Ultimately, corrective feedback is most effective when it empowers learners to become active participants in analyzing and restructuring their own language systems. In communicative classrooms, correction should not silence learners; it should help them notice, reflect, and grow.

San José, Costa Rica

Sunday, May 31, 2026


 

📚 References

Ellis, R., Loewen, S., & Erlam, R. (2006). Implicit and explicit corrective feedback and the acquisition of L2 grammar. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 28(2), 339–368. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0272263106060141

Lyster, R. (2004). Differential effects of prompts and recasts in form-focused instruction. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 26(3), 399–432. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0272263104263021

Lyster, R., & Ranta, L. (1997). Corrective feedback and learner uptake: Negotiation of form in communicative classrooms. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 19(1), 37–66. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0272263197001034


Click to enlarge the infographics



Types of Corrective Feedback in ELT, Balancing Interaction, Accuracy, And Learner Autonomy by Jonathan Acuña



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Sunday, May 31, 2026


Location: San José, Curridabat, Freses, Costa Rica

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