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Read the excerpt from "How the Grimm Brothers Saved the Fairy Tale."

All of the tales in the first edition bear the marks of their diverse storytellers who believed in the magic, superstitions, and miraculous transformations of the tales. It may be difficult for us to understand why this is the case, but for the storytellers and writers of these tales, the stories contained truths about the living conditions of their times. The tales in the first edition were collected not from peasants, as is commonly believed, but mainly from literate people whom the Grimms came to know quite well. Evidence shows that these people often obtained their tales from illiterate or anonymous informants. Even if they did not know their informants, the Grimms came to trust almost everyone who contributed to their collection. It is this mutual trust that marks the tales as something special and endows them with a certain humanity, what Germans call Menschlichkeit, and it is this mutual trust among folklorists in the nineteenth century that marks it as the golden age of folk and fairy tales. The tales in the first edition set a certain standard that collectors began to follow and still follow even today.

What is the central idea of this excerpt?

The stories are not collected from peasants, but from literate people.
The Grimms collected stories about real living conditions from people they trusted.
The Grimms did not know the informants who gave contributors their stories.
The 19th century was the golden age of folk and fairy tales.

Respuesta :

Answer: Between C and D (I think you can figure it out. But, in my opinion the answer is D)

Explanation: The central idea is on First Edition “All of the tales in the first edition bear the marks of their diverse storytellers who believed in the magic, superstitions...” and the main focus is on how the First Edition was formed and came to be “Evidence shows that these people often obtained their tales from illiterate or anonymous informants.”

Answer:

The correct answer is The Grimms collected stories about real living conditions from people they trusted.

Explanation:

This excerpt shows as a central idea how the brothers Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm managed to publish their stories based on real stories of people they had met. These stories told in a rather crude and realistic way, the experiences of literate people whom the Grimm knew very well.

According to the excerpt, the Grimm brothers trusted all the people they knew, which made their stories something special.

Therefore, we can say that the central idea of this excerpt is The Grimms collected stories about real living conditions from people they trusted.

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