I was raised on Struvelpeter- here is an allegory about bad hygiene and not clipping your nails. My German Oma used to read it to mepic.twitter.com/jI0JpdvErD
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I was raised on Struvelpeter- here is an allegory about bad hygiene and not clipping your nails. My German Oma used to read it to mepic.twitter.com/jI0JpdvErD
I’m mostly familiar with German methods to scare children since I was raised with them but they are really common all over the world. Here is Krampus - he’s scary afhttps://twitter.com/41strange/status/1201224048748851200 …
I think it is immoral because it doesn't teach kids to be good people, but rather to simply *act* like good people. A person isn't truly moral if they do things because they expect a reward or fear punishment.
Narratives are how we frame the world. You have to have scary stories for kids to understand life isn't all cookies and lemonade.If you protect your kids from the idea that unpleasant things can and WILL happen, they can't cope when it happens to them.
Depends on how it is framed obviously. Are parents telling kids Krampus is real or just telling a story for a didactic purpose? Lying is obviously immoral but telling a child the Boy Who Cried Wolf in hopes they stop lying doesn't seem immoral to me.
I think the key difference is whether there's an implied threat: If you're bad, Krampus will get YOU; vs Hans was bad, and Krampus got him.
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