We want kids to think about ourselves, but I want them to understand so that they can take classes and apply them to their daily lives. As Bettelheim states, "This allows children to tackle this problem in the most basic form [...]" (161), more complex stories will confuse them . Finally, children have to learn simple things such as life problems and anxiety. Then the children can apply it to life when it's time comes, which leads them to a happy life.
More inspiration from Bruno Bettelheim, author of "The Use of Magic", a symbolic fairy tale of Broond Brothers, Uncle Walk of Sondheim, and author James Lapine (also awarded the screenplay award in this article) Please get it. In some of their own inventions, the role put them in a tragic clash. There, "happiness is forever" accompanies a series of detailed printing conditions. A lineup including an inconspicuous bakery (attractive James Corden) and his wife (Emily Brandt), the bakery often appears in sharp redemption shoplifting (Lilla Crawford), next to a cunning witch (Meryl Streep) next door Live in, and grind a lot of shafts. Long ago, the witcher kidnapped baker's sister Rapunzel (MacKenzie Mauzy) and cursed the bakery with an infertile gene - punishes his alienated father (magical beans were stolen from the witch's garden )
Psychoanalyst Bruno Bettelheim made a beautiful debate about the kind of liquidation permitted by fairy tales in "use of magic": they let the children face primitive fears (their parents give up) Please imagine the rebellious behavior (derogatory authority) in a safe world removed from the people who live. Attractive forests and castles are so fantastic that their situation is extremely extreme and children do not need to feel unstable due to confusion. Her loss is more natural in fairy tales than anywhere else. It is a thin line between stories and makes our fears necessary stage and the stories can deepen them - it scares us further
Psychologists of the 20th century, especially Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Bruno Bertelheim, interpret the elements of a fairy tale as manifestations of general fear and desire. In his "Use of Enchantment" (1976), Bertelheim argues that the obviously cruel and random nature of many folklore fairy tales is indeed the "killing" development and start of the child in nature . Reflect the stage.