Sunday, October 25, 2009

Solution Lvl 19 Electric Box

Cinderella did not want to eat partridge


Cinderella by Gustave Doré (1867)

The stories that our children are fun ways to construct subjectivity. Therefore, they deserved more than an interpretive study. For example, was world famous psychoanalytic analysis of the fairy tale of Bruno Bettelheim (1976). Bettelheim saw in them a great way to start, in childhood, in the control of unconscious fears and desires. As an orthodox Freudian era, leaving aside any historical interpretation and did not see any negative aspects in the stereotypes of masculinity and traditional femininity (a significant point: his hypothesis psychologizing about autism mothers blamed a disorder later discovered the scientific community was of biological origin).
More recently, the approach from a gender perspective has shown us that contain messages that usually have not been favorable to women. While often taught the value and the initiative to the boys preach resignation and passivity girls. Expected to be beautiful and seem to be the prince dreamed keys to success.
But how to pass the critical analysis of fiction while retaining all the freshness that appeals in a story? This is the secret of Cinderella did not want to eat from partridges Nunila Cameros Myriam López Salamero and Sierra. Originally written for adults in a program against domestic violence, I think, however, can be a beautiful story for children who receive an education in freedom, self-respect, equality and sensitivity to other living things. It is short, I encourage you to discover.
Here you can see the story in his first version, albeit with a spelling error I guess and be remedied in the second edition has just been published as a book and with a foreword by Maruja Torres. The radio version they have done in Ecuador are here.
My congratulations to the authors for the gift that we have made a tod @ s with its originality and joy.

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