Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT104 S3 P4 Q24 Explanation

Freud & Bettelheim

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsNon-Author OpinionHumanities

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Passage

Freud’s essay on the “Uncanny” can be said to have defined, for our century, what literary criticism once called the Sublime. This apprehension of a beyond or of a daemonic—a sense of transcendence—appears in literature or life, according to Freud, when we feel that something uncanny is being represented, or conjured up, animistic conceptions of the universe, and is produced by the psychic defense mechanisms Freud called repression.

It would have seemed likely for Freud to find his literary instances of the uncanny, or at least some of them, in fairy tales, since as much as any other fictions they seem to be connected with repressed desires and archaic forms of thought. But Freud specifically excluded fairy tales from the judgment are provoked. Thus Freud, alas, found fairy tales to be unsuited to his own analysis.

However, the psychoanalyst Bruno Bettelheim, with a kind of wise innocence, has subjected fairy tales to very close, generally orthodox, and wholly reductive Freudian interpretations. Bettelheim’s book, although written in apparent ignorance of the vast critical traditions of interpreting literary romance, is nevertheless insights into how young children read and understand.

Bruno Bettelheim’s major therapeutic concern has been with autistic children, so inevitably his interpretive activity is directed against a child’s tendency to withdraw defensively or abnormally. According to Bettelheim, a child’s desperate isolation, loneliness, and inarticulate anxieties are addressed directly by fairy tales. By telling the child such stories themselves, parents strengthen telling, parents impart to the child their approval of the stories.

But why should fairy tales, in themselves, be therapeutic? Bettelheim’s answer depends on the child’s being an interpreter: “The fairy tale is therapeutic because children find their own solutions, through contemplating what the story seems to imply about their inner conflicts at this moment in their lives.” Bettelheim proceeds on the basis analyst, attempting to find helpful patterns in the stories, thus read alike, though in different vocabularies.

What this question is testing

Non-Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
24.

It can be inferred from the passage that Freud believed that in fairy tales, “nothing is incredible” (second paragraph)

Answer choices

  1. Unrelated to Goal1% picked this

    fairy tales can be read and understood even by

    The answer to this question is in the text. Freud thinks that "nothing is incredible" because "in fairy tale stories, everything is possible / no conflicts in the reader's judgment are provoked". This answer is talking about the fact that young children can read and understand fairy tales, which doesn't remotely resemble the wording we're looking for.

  2. Possible vs. Imaginary11% picked this

    everything in fairy tales is purely

    This comes pretty close. We know that Freud thinks that "nothing is incredible" because "in fairy tales, everything is possible / no conflicts in the reader's judgment are provoked". Does saying "everything is possible" mean the same thing as "everything is purely imaginary"? No. You could have a fairy tale that involves a horse. Are horses purely imaginary. It's possible that the horse talks and flies, which would be purely imaginary, but the horse itself isn't an imaginary thing. A fairy tale could be set in Europe. Is Europe imaginary?

  3. Correct78% picked this

    fairy tales are so fantastic that in them nothing seems out

    Why this is right

    We're looking for the idea that nothing is incredible in fairy tales because "in fairy tale stories, everything is possible / no conflicts in the reader's judgment are provoked". This answer is the closest match we get. "Nothing seems out of the ordinary" matches pretty well with "no conflicts in the reader's judgment are provoked". When something seems out of the ordinary, our brain notices it. Something is conflicting with our expectations. In fairy tales, nothing conflicts because we expect everything to be possible, so nothing ever seems out of the ordinary.

    Skill tested: Non-Author Opinion · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Trap4% picked this

    it is uncanny how the patterns of fairy tales fit our unconscious

    Unrelated to Goal Out of Scope: unconscious wishes We're looking for the best match for "in fairy tales, everything is possible / no conflicts in the reader's judgment are provoked". This is talking about "unconscious expectations and wishes", which our Support Window does not discuss. And it's using the word uncanny to describe fairy tales, even though Freud specifically excluded fairy tales from the realm of the uncanny.

  5. Trap7% picked this

    the reader represses those elements of fairy tales which might conflict with his

    Opposite, if anything Out of Scope: represses The text says that Freud thinks "nothing is incredible" because "in fairy tale stories, everything is possible / no conflicts in the reader's judgment are provoked". Whereas the text says that in a fairy tale, nothing conflicts with our judgment, this answer is saying that when stuff conflicts with our judgment we repress it. Not only does that not match the Support Window, it seems to somewhat contradict it.

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