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The Pedagogical Value of Board Work in Contemporary English Language Teaching

Board Work, British Council, ELT, ELT Pedagogy, online teaching, Reflective Practice, Virtual Classroom Management, Visual Scaffolding 0 comments

 

Clarity and engagement in online teaching
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in February 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     After completing my first course with the British Council through their TeachingEnglish platform, I decided to enroll in a second one. Some may argue that these courses are basic. In a sense, that may be true. However, when one genuinely engages with their content and reframes it within one’s own teaching reality, a deeper and more transformative reflection begins to take place.

     As an educator who has not taught in a brick-and-mortar classroom for a considerable period of time, and whose current practice is fully online, I find that many of the themes addressed by the British Council are not directly explored in depth within the mainstream literature on online teaching. Topics such as board organization, spatial management of information, visibility, sequencing, and visual scaffolding are often discussed in the context of physical classrooms. Yet, in fully synchronous virtual environments, these same principles must be reinterpreted.

     Because I have not used a physical board in years, my laptop screen has effectively become my board. Whether through PowerPoint slides, screen sharing, annotation tools, or breakout room collaboration, the digital interface is now the primary visual anchor of my lessons. This shift demands intentional management. Just as a cluttered whiteboard can confuse learners, a cluttered screen can overload them cognitively. Therefore, effective screen organization is not merely aesthetic; it is pedagogical. It directly affects clarity, engagement, and learning outcomes.

     This paper emerges from that reflection: a reconsideration of “board work” not as a traditional classroom artifact, but as a transferable pedagogical principle that remains central in online ELT contexts.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


The Pedagogical Value of Board Work in Contemporary English Language Teaching

 

Abstract

This paper examines the pedagogical relevance of board work in contemporary English Language Teaching (ELT), particularly within fully online synchronous environments. Drawing on the British Council’s TeachingEnglish course Organising the Classroom, Jeannine Dobbs’ (2001) foundational work on board use, and reflective practice in virtual teaching contexts, the paper argues that board work remains a central instructional tool despite technological shifts. The study reframes the traditional concept of the board to include digital interfaces such as shared screens, presentation slides, and virtual whiteboards. Through theoretical grounding in sociocultural theory and reflective pedagogy, the paper demonstrates that effective board organization supports classroom management, scaffolding, learner autonomy, and interactional competence. The discussion concludes with practical implications for teachers seeking to improve clarity, structure, and learner engagement in online classrooms.

Keywords:

Board Work, Virtual Classroom Management, ELT, ELT Pedagogy, Reflective Practice, Visual Scaffolding, Online Teaching, British Council

 

 

Resumen

Este trabajo examina la relevancia pedagógica del uso del pizarrón en la enseñanza contemporánea del inglés (ELT), especialmente en entornos sincrónicos completamente virtuales. A partir del curso Organising the Classroom de la plataforma TeachingEnglish del British Council, del trabajo de Jeannine Dobbs (2001) y de la práctica reflexiva en contextos de enseñanza en línea, se argumenta que el uso del pizarrón continúa siendo una herramienta central de instrucción a pesar de los cambios tecnológicos. El concepto tradicional de pizarrón se amplía para incluir interfaces digitales como pantallas compartidas, presentaciones y pizarras virtuales. Con base en fundamentos socioculturales y en la pedagogía reflexiva, el artículo demuestra que una organización efectiva del pizarrón favorece la gestión del aula, el andamiaje, la autonomía del estudiante y la competencia interaccional. Finalmente, se presentan implicaciones prácticas para docentes que buscan mejorar la claridad, la estructura y la participación en clases virtuales.

 

 

Resumo

Este artigo examina a relevância pedagógica do uso do quadro na prática contemporânea de ensino de inglês (ELT), especialmente em ambientes síncronos totalmente virtuais. Com base no curso Organising the Classroom da plataforma TeachingEnglish do British Council, na obra de Jeannine Dobbs (2001) e na prática reflexiva em contextos de ensino online, argumenta-se que o uso do quadro continua sendo uma ferramenta central de instrução, apesar das mudanças tecnológicas. O conceito tradicional de quadro é ampliado para incluir interfaces digitais como compartilhamento de tela, apresentações e quadros virtuais. Sustentado por fundamentos socioculturais e pela pedagogia reflexiva, o artigo demonstra que uma organização eficaz do quadro favorece a gestão da aula, o andaime pedagógico, a autonomia do aprendiz e a competência interacional. O texto conclui com implicações práticas para professores que desejam aprimorar clareza, estrutura e engajamento em aulas virtuais.

 


Introduction

In English Language Teaching (ELT), classroom tools often fall in and out of favor as technology evolves. Among these, the board, whether a traditional blackboard, a whiteboard, an interactive whiteboard (IWB), or a virtual shared screen, has sometimes been dismissed as outdated in technology-rich environments. However, recent pedagogical discussions suggest that boards remain a central instructional tool when used intentionally. The British Council’s TeachingEnglish: Organising the Classroom course revisits board work not as a relic of past teaching practices, but as a dynamic space for interaction, classroom management, and learner engagement (British Council, n.d.). This essay examines the pedagogical value of board work in contemporary ELT by drawing on course materials, Jeannine Dobbs’ foundational work, reflective teaching practice, and established scholarship in language pedagogy.

Boards as a Public and Pedagogical Space

Boards provide what Dobbs (2001) describes as a “public writing space” that is immediately accessible to both teachers and learners. This shared visibility allows teachers to highlight key content, scaffold learning, and make language salient at critical moments of instruction. According to the British Council (n.d.), boards can be used to present new information, record learner contributions, and support classroom management, thereby structuring the lesson both cognitively and procedurally.

Harmer (2015) reinforces this view by arguing that boards function as an “external memory” for the class, enabling learners to revisit language items without interrupting communicative flow. This is particularly relevant in language classrooms, where learners benefit from repeated exposure to form, meaning, and use. The board, therefore, is not merely a display surface but a mediational tool that supports noticing and retention.

Relevance of Boards in Technology-Mediated Classrooms

Despite increased access to digital tools, boards have not lost their relevance. As I have found myself reflecting on this topic (Acuña Solano, 2026), boards continue to be “a pivotal element of a class where students’ eyes and, consequently, their attention is fixed on,” regardless of whether they take the form of physical whiteboards, IWBs, or virtual boards in platforms such as Zoom or Microsoft Teams. This observation aligns with Scrivener’s (2011) claim that effective teaching tools are defined not by their novelty, but by how meaningfully they are integrated into lesson design.

In synchronous online teaching, shared screens and virtual whiteboards replicate many functions of traditional boards while adding new affordances, such as annotation, collaborative writing, and instant sharing of materials. These tools allow teachers to orchestrate lessons much like conductors, guiding learners through stages of controlled practice and freer production (Acuña Solano, 2026). Thus, technology does not replace board work; rather, it expands its pedagogical potential.

Board Work and Classroom Management

One of the most underestimated functions of board work is its role in classroom management. The British Council (n.d.) emphasizes that boards help learners understand “what’s happening in the lesson,” which reduces uncertainty and increases learner confidence by guiding them through the different stages of the lesson. Writing lesson aims, checklists, or activity sequences on the board allows learners to anticipate transitions and remain oriented throughout the lesson.

From a sociocultural perspective, this transparency supports learner autonomy. Vygotsky (1978) argues that learning is mediated through tools and signs, and the board functions as a visual mediator that structures interaction within the learner’s zone of proximal development. When learners can see lesson objectives and progress markers, they are better positioned to evaluate their own learning and participation; they can know where they are standing in terms of their own learning.

Learner Use of the Board and Agency

Board work is not exclusively a teacher-centered practice. Dobbs (2001) highlights that learners also benefit from using the board themselves, particularly when recording ideas, brainstorming, or sharing language. In online contexts, this learner involvement takes the form of screen sharing, collaborative document editing, and annotation tools. As I have noted for a long time, training learners to use these features in breakout rooms increases their responsibility for the learning process and encourages collaborative problem-solving (Acuña Solano, 2026).

Walsh (2011) argues that such interactional practices promote “classroom interactional competence,” allowing learners to participate more actively in meaning-making. When learners contribute to the board, their ideas gain legitimacy, fostering a sense of ownership and engagement. This practice also aligns with communicative language teaching principles, which emphasize learner-centered interaction.

What Teachers Add to the Board

Effective board work requires careful selection of content. The British Council (n.d.) lists items commonly added to boards, including lesson aims, useful language, learner ideas, instructions, and homework. My very personal reflections demonstrate strong alignment with this framework, particularly in the use of PowerPoint-based lesson plans that include objectives, grammar “cheat sheets,” dialogue frames, and task instructions (Acuña Solano, 2026).

This structured approach supports different proficiency levels. For A1 learners, for instance, projecting dialogue frames provides linguistic scaffolding that enables participation in communicative tasks. Ellis (2003) notes that such scaffolding is essential in form-focused instruction, as it reduces cognitive load while maintaining communicative intent.

Organizing the Board for Clarity

Disorganized board work can hinder learning rather than support it. Reflecting on my early teaching experiences, I must acknowledge that my untidy boards initially created confusion (Acuña Solano, 2026). Over time, deliberate division of board space, for dates, vocabulary, explanations, and reminders, improved clarity and learner accessibility (Acuña Solano, 2026). This evolution mirrors Scrivener’s (2011) recommendation that teachers plan board layout as carefully as lesson stages.

The British Council (n.d.) suggests dividing the board into reusable sections and permanent information areas, allowing teachers to manage cognitive focus effectively. In virtual environments, this principle remains relevant, as clean slides and well-organized shared screens help learners process information sequentially.

Common Pitfalls in Board Work

The British Council (n.d.) identifies several common issues that can undermine effective board work, including overcrowding, illegible writing, poor visibility, and excessive time spent writing. These pitfalls can be particularly problematic for learners who process information linearly, as disorganized notes may obscure key relationships between ideas (Acuña Solano, 2026).

Reflective practices, such as photographing the board at the end of lessons and discussing layout with colleagues, are recommended as professional development strategies (British Council, n.d.). Schön’s (1983) concept of the reflective practitioner supports this approach, emphasizing that teachers improve through systematic reflection on action.

Conclusion

Board work remains a fundamental component of effective ELT, regardless of technological context. As demonstrated through the British Council course materials, Dobbs’ foundational insights, and reflective teaching practice, boards function as cognitive, interactional, and managerial tools that support language learning. When thoughtfully organized and intentionally used, boards enhance learner engagement, scaffold understanding, and promote autonomy. Rather than being eclipsed by technology, board work has evolved alongside it, reaffirming its central role in both physical and virtual classrooms. For contemporary language teachers, revisiting and refining board work is not a step backward, but a pedagogically sound move forward.

Conclusion

Board work remains a fundamental component of effective ELT, regardless of technological context. As demonstrated through the British Council course materials, Dobbs’ foundational insights, and reflective teaching practice, boards function as cognitive, interactional, and managerial tools that support language learning. When thoughtfully organized and intentionally used, boards enhance learner engagement, scaffold understanding, and promote autonomy. Rather than being eclipsed by technology, board work has evolved alongside it, reaffirming its central role in both physical and virtual classrooms. For contemporary language teachers, revisiting and refining board work is not a step backward, but a pedagogically sound move forward.

San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, February 28, 2026

 


📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (2026). Reflective notes on board work in synchronous online ELT contexts. Unpublished manuscript.

British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom – Module 1: Understanding board work. https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/699499?stepId=2

Dobbs, J. (2001). Using the board in the language classroom. Cambridge University Press.

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

Harmer, J. (2015). How to teach English (2nd ed.). Longman.

Schön, D. A. (1983). The reflective practitioner: How professionals think in action. Basic Books.

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

Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Harvard University Press.

Walsh, S. (2011). Exploring classroom discourse: Language in action. Routledge.


 Virtual Board Work Checklist [handout] 

Virtual Board Work Checklist [Handout] by Jonathan Acuña



The Pedagogical Value of Board Work in Contemporary English Language Teaching by Jonathan Acuña



Listen to the podcast version of this article!

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You can also listen in your favorite podcast app: simply copy the link below and paste it into your podcast app to enjoy a conversation about the ideas explored in this blog post.

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Saturday, February 28, 2026


Location: San José Province, Guadalupe, Costa Rica

Custódio Marques’s Failures and Irony in Machado de Assis’s “O Astrólogo”

Brazilian Literature, Epistemology, Irony, Literary Analysis, Machado de Assis, Narrative Distance, Narrative Irony, Social Satire, Unreliable Narration 0 comments

 

Irony and blindness
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in February 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     My continued immersion in Brazilian classical literature has opened for me an ever-expanding horizon of aesthetic and intellectual discovery. Among its towering figures, Machado de Assis stands out as a literary craftsman whose ars literaria reveals extraordinary brilliance in the embroidery of plots, the subtle construction of characters, and the careful orchestration of narrative settings. His prose operates simultaneously at the psychological, philosophical, and social levels, demanding from the reader not only attention but interpretive humility.

     Reading Machado de Assis in the original Portuguese has provided me with first-hand access to the texture of his language, its irony, tonal shifts, lexical precision, and rhythmic subtlety. Engaging directly with his syntax and narrative voice has deepened my appreciation of his creativity and sharpened my sensitivity to the nuances that often resist translation. At the same time, this sustained engagement with his works has contributed significantly to the development of my command of Portuguese, a foreign language I aspire to master both academically and personally.

     The following study of “O Astrólogo” emerges from this dual commitment: to literary analysis and to linguistic immersion. It reflects not only a critical examination of Machado’s irony but also an ongoing intellectual dialogue with Brazilian literature as a living tradition.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Custódio Marques’s Failures and Irony in Machado de Assis’s “O Astrólogo”

 

Abstract

This paper examines irony as a structural and psychological strategy in Machado de Assis’s short story “O Astrólogo.” Through the figure of Custódio Marques, Machado constructs an anti-hero whose epistemological arrogance and reliance on speculation expose the limits of human perception. Custódio’s misreadings of gossip, social relationships, and even his own domestic reality illustrate a broader critique of nineteenth-century social pretension and interpretive vanity. The closing anecdote of the astrologer who falls into a well while observing the stars functions as a symbolic crystallization of the narrative’s central irony: the danger of abstraction detached from immediate reality. By situating the story within Machado’s mature ironic method, this study argues that “O Astrólogo” transcends satire and becomes a philosophical meditation on knowledge, perception, and self-awareness.

Keywords:

Brazilian Literature, Machado de Assis, Irony, Narrative Irony, Unreliable Narration, Epistemology, Social Satire, Narrative Distance, Literary Analysis

 

 

Resumen

Este artículo analiza la ironía como estrategia estructural y psicológica en el cuento “O Astrólogo” de Machado de Assis. A través de la figura de Custódio Marques, el autor construye un antihéroe cuya arrogancia epistemológica y dependencia de la especulación revelan los límites de la percepción humana. Las interpretaciones erróneas de Custódio —basadas en rumores, apariencias sociales y cálculos de conveniencia— ponen en evidencia una crítica más amplia a la pretensión social del siglo XIX y a la vanidad interpretativa. La anécdota final del astrólogo que cae en un pozo mientras observa las estrellas sintetiza simbólicamente la ironía central del relato: el peligro de la abstracción desvinculada de la realidad inmediata. Así, el cuento trasciende la sátira y se convierte en una reflexión filosófica sobre el conocimiento, la percepción y la autoconciencia.

 

 

Resumo

Este artigo analisa a ironia como estratégia estrutural e psicológica no conto “O Astrólogo” de Machado de Assis. Por meio da figura de Custódio Marques, Machado constrói um anti-herói cuja arrogância epistemológica e dependência da especulação evidenciam os limites da percepção humana. As leituras equivocadas de Custódio — fundamentadas em rumores, aparências sociais e cálculos de conveniência — revelam uma crítica mais ampla à pretensão social do século XIX e à vaidade interpretativa. A anedota final do astrólogo que cai em um poço enquanto observa as estrelas sintetiza simbolicamente a ironia central da narrativa: o perigo da abstração dissociada da realidade imediata. Dessa forma, o conto ultrapassa a sátira e se configura como uma reflexão filosófica sobre conhecimento, percepção e autoconsciência.

 


In Machado de Assis’s short story “O Astrólogo”, the protagonist Custódio Marques epitomizes a type of self-important yet fundamentally misguided individual whose illusions of insight and control generate a deeply ironic, psychologically rich narrative. Through Custódio’s misreadings of others, their lives, and of his surrounding reality, his zeal for gossip and speculation, and his inability to perceive his own domestic reality, Machado de Assis creates a satiric short story rooted in narrative irony, one that critiques both human pretension and the limits of individual perception.

To understand Custódio’s role as anti-hero in this story and the nature of irony in Machado de Assis’s work, it is useful to situate the story within the author’s broader narrative method. Brazilian literary critics observe that Machado’s mature style, particularly in short stories written after the late 1870s, is defined by an intensive use of irony, humor, psychological probing, and a narrative strategy that distances readers from simple realism (Jackson, 2015). Machado’s irony is not merely a rhetorical flourish, one may say; it shapes the structure of his narratives and highlights the discrepancy between characters’ self-perceptions and reality.

Custódio Marques: The Ironical Protagonist

The reader gets to know Custódio when he enters the story as an inspector of weights and measures, a seemingly mundane role, some would say; yet he grandiosely interprets it as a license to scrutinize every aspect of the lives of people around him. From the outset, his confidence in his own interpretive powers marks him as a figure whose self-importance exceeds his actual capability. Through his constant outings after work hours to spy people in his community, he carries rumors and interpretations like evidence of their wrongdoings, if collecting details about others equates to knowing them. In Machado’s design, this mentality is inherently ironic.

Custódio’s missteps begin with his reliance on speculation as truth. He listens to gossip at the botica (drugstore) and treats it as objective evidence of others’ characters, intentions, and plans for illegal acts. Instead of recognizing the epistemological limitations of second-hand information, he presents these stories as firm judgments. In this sense, Custódio embodies what Linda Hutcheon (1994) identifies as a central mechanism of irony: the gap between appearance and reality, where characters interpret events through their own flawed cognitive frameworks rather than objective observation. Machado’s narrative, through its ironic distance, invites the reader to see this gap clearly, from the outside, as an spectator.

Irony in Machado’s work often emerges not only from what happens but from what characters believe they see or understand. In “O Astrólogo”, Custódio believes he has a “sixth sense” for social truth; he imagines he can discern others’ legal or illegal motivations and moral character by spying their movement and trying to overhear people’s conversations. Yet this conviction blinds him to his mistakes and leads him to treat conjecture as knowledge. What Custódio thinks he knows about other people in town is based on his speculative but twisted min         

Custódio’s Major Misjudgments

Custódio makes several key errors revealing his failure to see reality clearly:

1.    Overvaluing Gossip as Evidence

Custódio’s confidence in his so-called “detective work” springs from overheard rumors rather than firm, verifiable facts. He then reanimates these rumors into “truths” about neighbors for example, the judge’s family reputation or potential romantic affairs. Critics of Machado’s irony have noted that such misrepresentation underscores the precariousness of human confidence when based on hearsay rather than empirical solidity (Carvalho da Annunciação, 2022).

2.    Misreading the Judge and Others

Believing he can use supposed secrets to exert social leverage, Custódio confronts the judge with insinuations concerning the judge’s nephew. Yet his assumptions collapse under scrutiny; the judge greets him with amusement or indifference, revealing Custódio’s inability to anticipate how others perceive or manage reputational threats. In essence, he mistook his own interpretative bravado for insight.

3.    Ignoring His Domestic Reality

Perhaps most poignantly in the whole story, Custódio remains blind to his daughter Esperança’s true feelings. He imagines he can arrange her marriage based on status calculations, not emotional truth. When Esperança confesses her love for Gervásio Mendes, Custódio’s earlier strategizing looks foolish. His failure to see what is obvious in his own home highlights the irony of a man who believes he can read the city yet cannot read his own family.

Through these missteps, Custódio embodies the unreliable interpreter of human motives. “The unreliable narration can be the supplement of the unnatural narration, that is, some of the unreliable narrator has the mental problem, or lack the cognitive capability of mind-reading” (Liu, 2014). Machado’s use of irony emphasizes the discrepancy between the protagonist’s self-image and his actual understanding of events.

Irony as Structural and Psychological Strategy

Scholarship on Machado de Assis consistently demonstrates that irony is not decorative but central to his formal organization and psychological realism. Critics argue that Machado uses irony as a mediation device that invites readers to reflect on characters’ limitations and the complexity of social reality (UNESP repository, 2023). This strategy reflects larger modernist tendencies toward self-conscious narration and the questioning of simple realism, anticipating later developments in world literature.

Irony in Machado’s fiction often arises from narrative distance, a gap between what characters believe and what readers can discern through the narrator’s cues along the story’s plot. Custódio’s confidence and eventual exposure fit this pattern: the reader perceives the discrepancies between his self-conception and narrative reality, generating ironic amusement and philosophical reflection.

Moreover, Machado’s imagery, especially the fable about the astrologer who falls into a well while gazing at the heavens, crystallizes this technique. The fable illustrates that attempts to understand others (the “sky” of social dynamics) without attending to immediate reality (one’s “feet”) leads to downfall. Custódio’s adherence to conjecture over concrete domestic truths embodies this moral.

Secondary Characters and Amplification of Irony

Custódio’s failure becomes more pronounced through the reactions and presences of secondary characters. Each contributes to the ironic framework of the story:

  • Dona Joana da Purificação, his sister, anchors the domestic sphere but never shares Custódio’s grand interpretive schemes. Her pragmatic presence contrasts starkly with Custódio’s speculative mind, highlighting his skewed priorities.
  • Esperança, his daughter, remains emotionally opaque to Custódio, revealing his inability to interpret his own household dynamics. Her genuine feelings, which differ from his projections, underscore the limits of his analytical reach.
  • Gervásio Mendes, Esperança’s beloved, serves as both a foil and corrective. His confrontation with Custódio, born of real emotional stakes, exposes the social damage Custódio’s gossip and assumptions can inflict even on his daughter.

These characters deepen the irony by embodying aspects of life that Custódio cannot account for, friendship, love, and authentic internal experience. They become unintended arbiters of reality, navigating truths that Custódio can only misinterpret through his distorted lenses of reality.

Irony and Machado’s Larger Critique

Machado de Assis’s use of irony in “O Astrólogo” aligns with his broader literary aims: to subvert narrative certainties and to critique the assumptions of nineteenth-century society in Brazil. As critics have pointed out, Machado’s irony often exposes the limitations of human knowledge, the futility of social pretense, and the discrepancy between external appearance and internal reality (eNotes.com critical overview, n.d.).

In drawing attention to such limitations, Machado challenges readers to question the reliability of both characters and narrators. Custódio is not merely a comic figure but representative of a type: humans who construct elaborate theories about the world while overlooking the simplest truths of everyday and domestic life.

Toward a Concluding Reflection

Machado de Assis’s “O Astrólogo” ultimately transcends the portrait of an overconfident provincial inspector and becomes a meditation on epistemological arrogance. Custódio Marques is not merely a comic figure undone by gossip; he represents a broader human tendency to confuse observation with understanding and speculation with mastery. His role as a self-appointed “guardian” of social truth collapses under the weight of his own blindness. By attempting to control narratives about others, he fails to perceive the most immediate truths within his own household. Machado’s irony thus operates not only at the level of plot but at the level of cognition itself.

The closing anecdote crystallizes this dynamic with striking clarity. The narrator recounts the story of an astrologer who, “while observing the stars, fell into a well,” prompting an old Thracian woman to remark that if he could not see what was at his feet, how could he presume to interpret the heavens. This classical image, echoing a long philosophical tradition tracing back to Plato’s Theaetetus, functions as a symbolic summation of Custódio’s trajectory. The astrologer’s fall literalizes the danger of speculative abstraction divorced from concrete awareness. In Machado’s hands, the anecdote is not decorative but diagnostic: it identifies the precise flaw that defines Custódio’s character.

Final Reflections

Custódio’s error lies not in curiosity but in disproportion. He seeks to decipher the “stars” of social life (reputation, intrigue, whispered scandal) while neglecting the immediate terrain of emotional reality beneath his own roof. The well into which the astrologer falls is metaphorically the abyss between perception and reality, between interpretive ambition and practical wisdom. By invoking this fable at the conclusion, Machado reframes the entire narrative retrospectively: every rumor Custódio spreads, every insinuation he makes, and every plan he constructs appears as another step toward that unseen well he falls in.

Moreover, the anecdote sharpens the story’s critique of nineteenth-century social pretension. Custódio’s desire to manipulate reputations reflects a culture deeply invested in appearances and hierarchical advantage. Yet Machado exposes how fragile such constructions are when built upon conjecture rather than self-knowledge. The irony is not merely situational but moral: the would-be interpreter of destiny cannot interpret his daughter’s affection; the supposed guardian of order destabilizes the very relationships he hopes to control. In this sense, Custódio embodies what modern theorists of irony identify as the gap between intention and effect, between asserted authority and actual competence.

The Astrologer Anecdote as a Symbol

The astrologer anecdote also universalizes the story’s lesson. While Custódio is a particular figure within a Brazilian provincial context, the closing image elevates his failure into a philosophical warning. The human impulse to read patterns into distant phenomena, whether celestial movements or social whispers, often disguises an avoidance of self-scrutiny. Machado suggests that the most dangerous blindness is not ignorance of distant matters but indifference to proximate truths. Self-confidence, when untethered from humility, becomes a cognitive hazard.

Conclusion

In this expanded frame, “O Astrólogo” emerges as a subtle yet incisive exploration of the limits of human understanding. Machado de Assis does not condemn curiosity or interpretation; rather, he exposes the irony that arises when interpretation becomes vanity. Custódio’s downfall is not tragic in the classical sense, yet it carries a quietly sobering force. The quest for omniscient control over social truth, so confidently pursued by Custódio, is revealed as an illusion. Knowledge without self-awareness collapses into folly, just as the astrologer collapses into the well.

Thus, the final anecdote does more than conclude the narrative; it refracts the entire story through a philosophical lens. The reader is left with a question that extends beyond Custódio: In our own efforts to interpret the “stars” of distant events, ambitions, or reputations, do we neglect what lies directly before us? Machado’s irony lingers precisely because it implicates not only his protagonist but also the interpretive impulses of his audience. The fall of the astrologer is comic, but its resonance is enduring.

San José, Costa Rica

Friday, February 27, 2026



📚 References

Carvalho da Annunciação, V. (2022, October). Advanced ideas, Anachronistic landscapes: The Contradictions of Science in Machado de Assis. University of Cambridge. Dissertation. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/bitstreams/4157f360-ee86-4646-9aa0-b6755535d699/download

eNotes.com. (n.d.). Machado de Assis Criticism. In eNotes.com — analysis of Machado’s use of humor and irony. https://www.enotes.com/topics/joaquim-maria-machado-de-assis/criticism

Hutcheon, L. (1994). Irony’s edge: The theory and politics of irony. Routledge. https://api.pageplace.de/preview/DT0400.9781134937554_A24929591/preview-9781134937554_A24929591.pdf

Jackson, K. D. (2015). The Literary Modernism of Machado de Assis. In Machado de Assis: A Literary Life. Yale University Press. https://es.scribd.com/document/356614400/K-David-Jackson-Machado-de-Assis-A-Literary-Life-pdf

Liu, X.-y. (2014). Theory of mind and the unreliable narrator. US-China Foreign Language, 12(5), 422–428. David Publishing. https://www.davidpublisher.com/Public/uploads/Contribute/551902e23750a.pdf

Machado de Assis. (1877). O astrólogo. In Contos Fluminenses.

eNotes.com. (n.d.). Machado de Assis Criticism. In eNotes.com — analysis of Machado’s use of humor and irony.

UNESP repository. (2023). Machado de Assis: Style and Authorship — analysis of Machado’s rhetorical use of irony and parody.



Custódio Marques’s Failures and Irony in Machado de Assis’s “O Astrólogo” by Jonathan Acuña



Listen to the podcast version of this article!

If the Google Drive player doesn’t load, please refresh the page.
You can also listen in your favorite podcast app: simply copy the link below and paste it into your podcast app to enjoy a conversation about the ideas explored in this blog post.

https://podpod.me/rss/1worOGGkLrw1Z.rss




Friday, February 27, 2026


Location: San José Province, Guadalupe, Costa Rica

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