logo

The Uses of Enchantment

Bruno Bettelheim

The Uses of Enchantment: The Meaning and Importance of Fairy Tales

Bruno Bettelheim

The Uses of Enchantment Part 1 Summary & Analysis

Part 1 Summary: “A Pocketful of Magic”

Life Divined from the Inside

Bettelheim argues that in fairy tales, “internal processes are externalized and comprehensible” (25). He recalls a tradition in Hindu medicine where a patient is given a fairy tale to meditate on when faced with a problem. While his external problems will be different from the fairy tale protagonist’s, his internal conflict will be similar. Importantly, the fairy tale does not dictate the solution; rather, the meditator uses the tale as a guide to find his own solution and so is active in the model of his own healing.

Bettelheim continues to emphasize the role of fairy tales in “achieving a more mature consciousness to civilize the chaotic pressures of their unconscious” (24). These stories have evolved over generations to address universal concerns and provide the reassuring message that a good life is possible as long as we do not evade the struggles that push our current, limited identity toward a more mature and satisfying one. Bettelheim emphasizes that reading the story aloud to a child is the most helpful method of disseminating it as the parent thus affirms the child’s process of using fairy tales as a guide to overcoming obstacles.

“The Fisherman and the Jinny”: Fairy Tale Compared to Fable

blurred text

Unlock this
Study Guide!

Join SuperSummary to gain instant access to all 64 pages of this Study Guide and thousands of other learning resources.
Get Started
blurred text