*must read the source that I attached below only. outside sources that I don’t provide are not accepted and will request for a refund.!!!!
The main reason for my dissatisfaction is that respondents provided a summary of the action of the story rather than an analysis. A summary offers just the facts, but an analysis suggests why things happen this way.
for Example:
Summary: After Avenant’s adventures are complete, the Fair arrives at the King’s palace where she marries him but he soon dies. Then the Fair can marry Avenant the man she loves.
Analysis: After delaying her visit to the King as long as possible by assigning Avenant challenges he must complete before she will leave, the Fair goes to the King’s palace and marries him as her duty demands. The king, however, is still mad with jealousy and continues to persecute Avenant. Because he has failed as a king, events conspire so that he is punished and becomes responsible for his own death. Now the Fair can take her rightful place as ruler and reward Avenant for his heroism and devotion.
i need it to be an analysis !!
the assignment is this below ⬇️
Contemporary Americans know a version of the Sleeping Beauty story that goes something like this: A young princess is cursed at birth by a wicked fairy. She manages to stay out of trouble and avoid the curse until she is in her late teens. Then she pricks her finger sewing and invokes the curse. The whole castle full of people fall asleep for a hundred years–luckily maintaining perfect health–until a prince comes searching and finds Sleeping Beauty. Instantly falling in love, he impulsively kisses her on the lips, awakens her, and she immediately returns his affection. They live happily ever after. This version is SO popular that there is even a Disneyland ride that acts out this tale.
Perrault’s version tells this story which takes him to the bottom of p.4 in your copy of the tale but continues the story to tell us readers what happens next (as tv show “The Bachelor” fans would say, “after the Rose”). He turns “The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods” into his most anti-aristocratic story by detailing what Beauty and the Prince’s life was REALLY like once they were wed. According to the second half of the story, what are the tough challenges that the newlyweds face now that their sudden, idealized moment of love is over? What reality lies behind the pretty facade of aristocracy?


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