Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Fairy tales speak to both parents and children, but most adults read them as moral lessons for kids. Bruno Bettelheim, for example, sees Hansel and Gretel as teaching children to grow up and stop being greedy, and he often interprets stories to make children look bad and parents look innocent. The author argues this ignores real cases when parents are selfish or abusive and notes that newer research questions Bettelheim’s view. Overall, society tends to deny adult wrongdoing and turn children’s stories into tools for teaching behavior instead of simply allowing playful enjoyment.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the author's claim that interpretation depends on readers' perspectives—look for lines saying interpretations differ according to readers' assumptions and expectations.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage13.Which one of the following principles most likely underlies the author's characterization of literary interpretation?
Correct Answer
D
The author argues that readers' assumptions shape interpretation: he says scholars often construct meaning "by using the reading strategies of an adult" and that "his readings produce meanings that are very different from those constructed by readers with different cultural assumptions and expectations." These statements support D, which says meanings are influenced by the assumptions and expectations readers bring to a story.
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