Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Freud says the "uncanny" is the strange feeling that something beyond the ordinary is present, caused by our belief that thoughts can control reality and by repressed feelings. He rules out fairy tales as uncanny because in them anything can happen, so nothing seems truly surprising. Bruno Bettelheim, however, applies Freudian ideas to argue that fairy tales can be therapeutic for children—especially lonely or autistic ones—because children use the stories to understand and solve their own emotional problems, and parents’ telling of the tales reinforces that help.
Logic Breakdown
Find Bettelheim's explicit claim about what children do when they interpret fairy tales; match 'interpret a story benignly' to his statement that children 'find their own solutions.'
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.According to the passage, Bettelheim believes that when children interpret a story benignly, they
Correct Answer
A
Bettelheim explicitly states, "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." This indicates that when children interpret a story benignly they arrive at solutions or answers to their own needs; the passage also says that "a child's desperate isolation, loneliness, and inarticulate anxieties are addressed directly by fairy tales," reinforcing that these solutions meet children's needs.
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