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So let's start with flatness. Characters in a fairy tale are always flat ( whether Little Red Riding Hood, Stepmother, Hedgehog, or Beast. ) In "The Rosebud," we have a mother and two children, one identified only as "the youngest" and one discarded after the first sentence. Fairy-tale characters are silhouettes, mentioned simply because they are there. They are not given many emotions-perhaps one, such as happy or sad-and they are not in psychological conflict... This absence of depth, this flatness, violates a technical rule writers are often taught in beginning writing classes: that a character's psychological depth is crucial to a story. In a fairy tale, however, this flatness functions beautifully; it allows depth of response in the reader. -"Fairy Tale Is Form, Form Is Fairy Tale," Kate Bernheimer How does the writer effectively structure the body paragraph to developed the central idea that fairy tales are important? Check all that apply.

User Othmane
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2 Answers

6 votes

Answer:

b and c and d

Step-by-step explanation:

cuz im right

User Tad Guski
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4 votes

Answer:

b,c,d

Step-by-step explanation:

by beginning with a topic related to the central idea

by defining the topic discussed

by providing examples related to the topic

User ThatQuantDude
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