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Tales That Hurt Quietly

The Darkness Beneath Childhood Stories

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Tales That Hurt Quietly

By: Boris Kriger
Narrated by: Sarah H. Sanders
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This book examines the covert mechanisms by which children's literature and storytelling traditions shape moral, emotional, and ideological development through narrative form. Across these chapters, fairy tales and cultural myths are reinterpreted not as innocent entertainment, but as structured systems of control—normalizing obedience, framing suffering as necessary, and aligning virtue with conformity. The text interrogates recurring narrative tropes such as deferred rescue, the moralization of pain, the ritual function of punishment, and the binary construction of good and evil. Each chapter isolates a narrative device—happy endings, heroic arcs, lullabies, irony, or magic—and reveals how it functions to enforce cultural norms under the guise of delight, instruction, or comfort.

In contrast, the final chapters propose alternative models of storytelling: the gentle narrative and the unschooled imagination, which seek to displace the pedagogical use of suffering and reclaim narrative as a space of presence, possibility, and freedom. Rather than stories that discipline the inner life, these chapters advocate for narrative forms that respect ambiguity, preserve wonder, and reject harm as a prerequisite for transformation. The work as a whole argues that storytelling is not a neutral act—it is a formative one—and invites a reevaluation of how stories are constructed, circulated, and believed.

©2025 Boris Kriger (P)2025 Boris Kriger
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