![]() ![]() ![]() The second theme in the story is the danger of trusting strangers. ![]() However, the result of this conversation is the same in both versions. Perrault begins it with: “Grandmother, what big arms you have! – All the better to hug you with, my dear.” The Brothers Grimm write: ”Oh, grandmother, what big ears you have! – All the better to hear you with” (Ashliman). Additionally, their conversation is slightly different in each interpretation. Therefore, the degree of naivety in Perrault’s version is higher than in that by the Brothers Grimm. The only difference between the two versions is that in the Perrault’s adaptation, the girl gets into bed to her grandmother, while in the Brothers Grimm’s adaptation, she speaks with her grandmother standing beside the bed. In fact, in both versions, the Little Red Riding Hood shows her naivety when she thinks that her grandmother has completely changed because of her disease (Ashliman). First of all, this theme can be vividly seen in the episode when the Little Red Riding Hood first meets the wolf. One of the most important of them is the naivety of adolescents. Some many themes and ideas are laid into the story about the Little Red Riding Hood. ![]()
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