Fairy Tales #11: The Emperor’s New Clothes

The Emperor’s New Clothes by Hans Christian Andersen continues to fascinate modern day children. Of course everybody loves the famous underwear scene, but that’s not the only reason it has endured. It also touches on an array of virtues and vices like wisdom versus foolishness and humility versus pride in highly palpable ways. What’s more, it offers lessons for the everyday person and the statesman alike.

In order to unpack those ideas, let’s first examine the plot.  

PLOT SUMMARY
Exposition – The Background

There lives an emperor who is particularly fond of his appearance and spares no expense to dress in the finest attire. So obsessed is he, that he spends virtually all of his time consumed with his looks instead of the affairs of state.

Inciting Incident – The Problem

Knowing the emperor’s disposition, two swindlers seek to deceive the king and thereby make a profit. They pretend to be fine tailors and offer to sew him an outfit of such unmatched quality that none but the wisest can see it.

Rising Action – The Build-up

Greedy for such finery, the emperor commissions the tailors and follows their progress most eagerly. However, fearing his own foolishness would be revealed if he could not see the clothes, he sends in several of his advisors one after another to look at the clothes on his behalf.

As the tailors are not actually sewing anything but simply pretending to cut fabric and sew seams, none can see anything. Yet, all pretend to see a fine outfit for fear of being thought foolish. As the days progress and the pretend outfit nears completion, the emperor plans a royal procession throughout the streets of his kingdom to show off his new clothes. 

Climax – The Point of No Return

Finally, the emperor steps into his dressing chamber to try on his new outfit. Of course he can not see the clothes because they do not exist, but he pretends to get dressed in them just the same. There is no way he is going to admit that he does not see them because he, too, does not want to be thought a fool.

Falling Action – The Unraveling

And so the king processes through the streets with a grand entourage wearing only his underwear but believing himself royally clad.

Anti-resolution – The Truth is Out

All but a small child pretend to see the outfit. The child, not concerned with the thoughts of others, blurts out the obvious truth that the emperor is wearing nothing but underwear. The rest of the crowd soon also acknowledges this to be true.

Even the king realizes he has been made a fool of, but he continues on his procession, unwilling to acknowledge his shame.

PLOT ANALYSIS
Clothed in Falsehood

There are a number of figurative interpretations at play in this timeless story. Perhaps the first and most obvious has to do with vanity. After all, the king is obsessed with his looks, and that is what leads him down a foolish path.

When we dig just a little deeper, it becomes clear that his vanity relates not only to his looks but also to his power. He is obsessed with “being king” yet cares nothing for the real duties this entails. Instead, he spends his days playing dress-up, so to speak, and pretending to be in charge of the kingdom.

What’s worse, he knows he is a fool and is worried sick that anyone should find out. That is why he refuses to look at the outfit himself. He knows from the beginning that he is not wise enough to see it. And when he finally looks into the dressing room, his doubts about himself are confirmed. He cannot see the outfit.

Helen Stratton, The fairy tales of Hans Christian Andersen, page 45 illustration

Ironically, what he really cannot see is that he has been tricked. When he parades through town in his underwear, he believes himself regally clad. Just as the truth of his nakedness is revealed, so too is the truth of his power. He has none. All his wisdom and authority are empty, so much so that even a small child knows it.

It does not take an act of war or even well-planned subterfuge to bring about his downfall. It takes only two swindlers. He truly was not fit to be king.

Historical Lessons

This story, though about a king, was not written for a king. It was written for the people.

We know that because the narrator lets us readers in on the trick the swindlers are playing. From the beginning, we know they are not really sewing a fine outfit, and we anxiously look forward to seeing how the king will deal with them. We may hope he does not fall for their trick, but we thoroughly enjoy that he does.

Hans Christian Andersen, writing in the 1800s, knew that most of his readers would feel a level of disdain for kings whose right to rule was far more arbitrary than we could ever claim today. A king was either born into power or took it by force. Meanwhile, the people plain-old had to fall in line.

Many a real king leisurely sat in his palace “admiring his power” while the people toiled away paying taxes, ready to suit up for war on command. For them, the emperor’s new clothes were nothing but a well-worn reality. 

CONCLUSION

Such is often the case today as well. Be it the politics of state or family, church or school, fame or fashion, one needs ever to be on the lookout for falsehood.

And therein is the lesson I like best about The Emperor’s New Clothes. It teaches children to look critically at the world around them. In a sense, it shows them that they have power far greater than that of a king for theirs is the power of critical thinking. With it, they can judge the world around them and rule their own lives with wisdom and virtue.

Image in the public domain

Literacy, Wisdom, and Virtue #3: Silent Reading

If given the choice, most children would prefer to be read to indefinitely. It seems easier, especially for early and struggling readers, and it’s engaging and restful. But the time comes for every child to really learn to read independently. I’m not just talking about decoding either. I’m talking about trying to read the likes of Shakespeare and the other Great Authors in one’s own head.

That requires a child to practice the virtue of silent reading. Put differently, he must learn to turn off the noises around him and listen to his own internal voice in conversation with an author.

Silent reading develops the habits of discipline and attention in a very different way than reading aloud. Whereas the latter grabs students in a more sensory, interactive, and energizing way, the former calls on students to be still within themselves.

That can be very hard, even for adults!

Depending on our mood, level of interest in a subject, or the things going on around us, it can be difficult to get into a silent reading rhythm. Here are several strategies that can help.

Classroom Culture

Classrooms should be the ideal place for students to get lost in a book, but that can be hard to facilitate. Not surprisingly, silent reading needs silence of mind and body, and just one restless student can upset the rhythm for an entire class. For that reason, it may be tempting to assign silent reading as homework and use class time for discussions.

I do that plenty of the time, but I still work silent reading into the school day. After all, there is no guaranteeing silent reading is even possible in a child’s home. I moderate it in small chunks at first—ten, fifteen minutes or so—and work up to longer sessions as the year progresses. With time and deliberate oversight, students become stakeholders in a silent reading culture, not least because it means less homework!

Teacher Prompted

Sometimes I want to say, “Okay, turn to chapter six and begin reading in silence.”

But that is not a good way to get a class going. It’s kind of like pushing a beginning swimmer into the deep end. He is so focused on not drowning that he can’t even think about how to use his arms and legs, let alone control his breath. Likewise, the reader pulls and grasps in his head, often drowning in the text before him.

Instead, I generally set up silent reading with some kind of prompt. Perhaps it’s a discussion about the previous chapter and how it positions the next.

Before having students read Act III of William Shakespeare’s King Lear, I might ask, ”Why do you think King Lear believed Regan and Goneril when they said they loved him?…Should their insincerity have been obvious?…Then why didn’t he pick up on it?”

In just a few minutes, students realize that King Lear’s mental state is in a bad way, and it’s about to get much worse. Then when they read Act III on their own, they are primed to recognize King Lear’s final descent into madness.

Other times, I assign a writing exercise that draws out important themes that a story will cover.

Before reading “The Marriage Set” from Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales I like to ask, “Who knows more about marriage, a person who has been married and divorced multiple times or someone who has studied about it in books?” The abstract people from the prompt take on form when students meet the Wife of Bath and the Clerk, two characters who sharply disagree in their views on marriage. Students must then “test” their preconceived notions against the story line.

Another favorite approach is to read the first several paragraphs aloud to the class with them reading along. This draws students into the story and prepares them to successfully finish it on their own. For more on this, return to my previous post on reading aloud.

Directed Reading

One way to aid student comprehension and prompt critical thinking is to give students writing assignments in conjunction with reading. I favor narration exercises, reading guides, and journal entries, though there are many ways teachers can accomplish this.

Reading Guides

Reading guides are teacher-generated questions about the text. If my class is reading a novel, I have a reading guide for each chapter. If we are reading a play, then I might have one for each act or scene. In either case, I write my questions in chronological order, so students can read and answer questions more or less simultaneously. I like this model the best for middle school students because it keys them in to the important details and ideas in the reading.

Here is an example of a reading guide I designed in conjunction with Saint Benedict: The Story of the Father of Western Monks by Mary Fabian Windeatt. Although it’s not considered a Great Book, it is beautifully written and enriches my classical curriculum as a whole. Students read this book entirely on their own. My reading objective in this case is to help students improve their reading comprehension while learning about a great medieval saint. For that reason, a reading guide is ideal.

Narration Exercises

The Latin root narr means “tell,” which is not surprising when one thinks about words like narrator and narrative. Likewise, narration exercises are designed to teach students how to re-tell a story, which is a wonderful way to check their comprehension after reading something. Narrations can be done verbally, but I prefer having students complete them in writing as the end product tends to be more thoughtful and well-planned.

Narrations are somewhat similar to summaries, but they have more of a story voice. Instead of just stringing together sentences that present details from the original story in chronological order, students are encouraged to make the narration exciting and suspenseful. Students may stick with the narrative perspective, but they may also choose to tell the story differently, which can be very fun to read aloud to classmates.

This narration example was completed by a small group of students in connection with reading the story of Genseric the Vandal in Heroes of the Middle Ages by Eva March Tappan. Though also not a Great Book, the stories Tappan tells are beautifully written and historical by design.

Journal Entries

For journal entries, I write deeper, more analytically focused questions that address a central Truth or major theme at play. In response, students end up writing mini-theses about each chapter.

This is a more challenging assignment for students than reading guides and narrations because it requires higher level thinking in addition to basic comprehension and creative writing. Students must synthesize a number of details in the text and develop their own ideas. Moreover, journal entries are open-ended in the sense that students write as much or as little as necessary to answer the questions in a logical, evidence-based, persuasive way.

Here is an example of a journal entry based on questions I designed for Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc by Mark Twain. Unlike the two aforementioned examples, Mark Twain’s book falls squarely in the Great Book genre and demands a higher level of reading.

Informal Assessment

Silent reading provides invaluable insight into students’ reading habits. I may sit at my desk and discreetly “watch” students, or I may walk around and openly “monitor” them. In either case, I am constantly assessing how students read. While I may not be able to hear the mental process going on in a child’s head during silent reading, I can determine much from his body language or just tracking how quickly he turns the page.

“No wonder so-and-so’s journal entries are sparse. He’s reading too fast to absorb much,” I might observe. Or, “I wonder why so-and-so is having so much trouble reading today. He keeps looking around. Better have a chat with him.”

Collectively, these strategies help students develop the virtue of silent reading. I always remind students they will be working on this virtue their entire life, and I make sure to let them know my first reading of each of the works we study together was difficult, too. It’s only through continued work on the same texts that I have learned what I know, and I get more out the books each time I read them. They will, too.