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Fairyland Revisited


Article # : 11649 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 9 / 1986  2,008 Words
Author : Leil Lowndes and Stephen P. Silberling
Leil Lowndes is a free-lance writer living in New York. She is the director of Applause, Inc., which provides promotional service to major corporations. Stephen P. Silberling is an attorney in New York and has done extensive magazine writing.

       The wondrous world of witches and wishes, palaces and princesses, fairies and spells that so many of us inhabited in our childhood imaginations is now being revisited by a number of mothers and child psychologists. Few of us have ever doubted the power of fairy tales. We have always believed that fairy tales are instrumental in helping children find meaning in life - that they teach good values and help children crease an order out of a chaotic universe. The German poet Schiller wrote that "deeper meaning resides in the fairy tales told to me in my childhood than in the truth that is taught by life."
       
        A child psychologist whom the academic community respects as the greatest authority on fairy tales is Bruno Bettelheim, author of the 1976 classic The Uses of Enchantment - The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales. He and most of America's educators feel that fairy tales benefit children who are coping with the psychological problems of growing up and integrating their personalities.
       
        But now, perhaps stemming from a 1984 conference at Princeton University where over 100 zealous intellectuals gathered to analyze The Influence of Fairy Tales on Society, a number of educators are taking a second look at such hallowed stories as "Cinderella," "Hansel and Gretel," "Sleeping Beauty," "Snow White," and "Rapunzel."
       
        Some skeptical academicians and parents are beginning to argue that fairy tales are magical stories that allow children to experience the kind of perfect justice they rarely see in life. For instance, the big bad wolf, attempting to go down the chimney of the third little pig to eat him, falls right into pig three's boiling soup pot and ... (2000 of 11316 Characters)
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