Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT115 S3 P2 Q12 Explanation

Fairy Tales

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Passage

Fairy tales address themselves to two communities, each with its own interests and each in periodic conflict with the other: parents and children. Nearly every study of fairy tales has taken the perspective of the parent, constructing the meaning of the tales by using identifying universally valid tenets of moral instruction for children.

For example, the plot of “Hansel and Gretel” is set in motion by hard-hearted parents who abandon their children in the woods, but for psychologist Bruno Bettelheim the tale is really about children who learn to give up their unhealthy dependency on their parents. According to Bettelheim, this story—in which the children family’s support. Thus, says Bettelheim, does the story train its young listeners to become “mature children.”

There are two ways of interpreting a story: one is a “superficial” reading that focuses on the tale’s manifest content, and the other is a “deeper” reading that looks for latent meanings. Many adults who read fairy tales are drawn to this second kind of interpretation in order to avoid facing the and expectations, who, unlike Bettelheim, do not find inflexible tenets of moral instruction in the tales.

Bettelheim interprets all fairy tales as driven by children’s fantasies of desire and revenge, and in doing so suppresses the true nature of parental behavior ranging from abuse to indulgence. Fortunately, these characterizations of selfish children and innocent adults have been discredited to some extent by recent psychoanalytic literature. The need to stand in the service of pragmatic instrumentality rather than foster an unproductive form of playful pleasure.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Topic

The author is unhappy with how the famous psychologist Bruno Bettelheim reads fairy tales — and is using "Hansel and Gretel" as a case study of what goes wrong.

Framework

Present Debate. The author lays out Bettelheim's view and then argues against it.

Main Point

The simpler version: in "Hansel and Gretel," parents abandon the kids. That's right there in the story. But Bettelheim somehow turns the story into a lesson for the kids about being greedy and dependent. The author thinks this kind of reading happens over and over — Bettelheim and others can't handle the idea that parents in the stories might be doing something wrong, so they reroute every fairy tale into "lessons for children." That impoverishes how we read these stories and feeds a bigger pattern of treating children as the only ones who need moral correction.

P1: Two audiences

Fairy tales speak to both parents and children, but most studies have approached them as moral instruction from parents to children. The parent-perspective wins.

P2: A worked example

"Hansel and Gretel" starts with parents abandoning the children. Bettelheim makes the story about the kids learning not to be greedy or dependent. He even calls them "mature children" by the end. Notice how the parental wrongdoing has disappeared from his reading.

P3: The pattern, generalized

Adults are drawn to "deep" readings that put children in the wrong. Stories that don't fit the orthodoxy get rewritten. Readers from different cultures find the same tales saying very different things.

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

The question
12.

The author of the passage would be most likely to agree with which one of

Answer choices

  1. Opposite / Strong: principal pleasures5% picked this

    Children who never attempt to look for the deeper meanings in fairy tales will miss out on one of the principal

    The last sentence of the passage makes it seem like the author prefers the superficial meanings of fairy tales. She seems to be cool with the idea that fairy tales might not be an instruction manual for child morality. Instead, they might just be an "unproductive form of playful pleasure", and that's fine! Our author thinks the latent/deeper meanings that Bettelheim & Co. stretch to find are silly. At the end of the 3rd paragraph, she's saying, "People who aren't so bent on finding moral instruction don't even see these deeper meanings the psychologists claim are there". So our author would definitely not call them the principal pleasures of reading them.

  2. Out of Scope: method of discovery9% picked this

    It is better if children discover fairy tales on their own than for an adult to suggest that

    The passage never talks at all about how children are initially turned on to fairy tales, whether it's by an adult, by a fellow classmate, or by just wandering around the library and happening upon them themselves. The only thing we could probably say relating to this would be that the author would say, "It is better if we let children just enjoy the fairy tales as stories than for us to use fairy tales as part of our unending moral instruction".

  3. Unsupported Causal Relationship2% picked this

    A child who is unruly will behave better after reading a fairy tale if the tale is suggested

    The passage never comes anywhere near the causal sequence of 1. kid A says to unruly kid B, "hey -- you wanna try a fairy tale? The first one's free." 2. kid B reads fairy tale 3. kid B starts behaving better

  4. Too Strong: most can't comprehend11% picked this

    Most children are too young to comprehend the deeper meanings contained

    The idea of whether or not children can comprehend the deeper meanings is never addressed in the passage. All we know about the deeper meanings is the psychologists' motivations in seeking these deeper meanings, as well as the author's sentiment that these deeper meanings are super dubious, We never talk about whether kids could comprehend them, and we certainly don't get quantitatively precise enough to talk about whether it would be higher or lower than 50% of children.

  5. Correct73% picked this

    Children should be allowed to enjoy literature that has no

    Why this is right

    This is supported by the final sentence of the passage. The 4th paragraph (and really the whole passage) is a complaint about what Bettelheim and his ilk are doing to fairy tales. The author thinks it's dumb how obsessed these psychologists are with finding moral lessons within fairy tales, and she thinks it's kind of obnoxiously warping fairy tales from being a playful style of literature targeted for kids into yet another component of our society's compulsion to deny adult evil and position kids as the "objects of unending moral instruction." The 2nd to last sentence of the passage indicates that the author is happy ("Fortunately") that we're moving away from this (adults = good, children = evil) tradition. So we can carry through that attitude into how we interpret the final sentence. She is saying, sarcastically, "For these jerks, a literature targeted for children must serve the purpose of pragmatic instrumentality (i.e. must help us instruct the children about how to be less evil, more moral), rather than serve the purpose [that is should have] of just giving the kids some fun stories to read."

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

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