Knowledge (XXG)

Gudbrand on the Hill-side

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As he tells her of his trades, she finds a positive side to all of his decisions, and as he tells her about selling the rooster because he needed food to get home, she exclaims, "Now God be praised that you did so! Whatever you do, you do it always just after my own heart. Heaven be thanked that I have got you safe back again; you who do everything so well that I want neither rooster nor goose; neither pigs nor kine." Gudbrand wins the bet with his neighbor.
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that he has at home. The bet is that Gudbrand's wife will not be displeased with his decisions and his neighbor accepts. The next day Gudbrand and his neighbor head off to his home where the neighbor hides behind the door while Gudbrand greets his wife and explains to her the details of his travels.
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In the Andersen version, called "What the Old Man does is always Right" (sometimes translated "What Father does is always Right"), the essential story is the same though some of the components are different. Instead of a cow, the man begins with a horse; instead of ending with nothing, he ends with
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He stops at his neighbor's place to rest for the night, and he tells the neighbor his story. The neighbor tells him he would hate to be in his shoes, because his wife would be very upset with him if he came home with nothing. Gudbrand tells his neighbor that he and his wife get along fine, and she
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reinterpreted the story by inverting it: the man begins with a bag of rotten apples and ends with a horse, and his wife is dissatisfied with every trade he made (compare this to the Japanese legend of the
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and decide to bring one to town to sell. When Gudbrand arrives in town, he is unable to sell his cow but since he is just as well off as before, he heads back home.
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to exemplify a dissonance-increasing behavior (repeated poor trades) that leads to dissonance reduction behavior (believing that the trades were well-made).
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Neighbor: He represents how most people would react to Gudbrand's impulsive nature and how most other people's wives would respond.
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Cole, Joanna; Schwarz, Jill Karla, eds. (1983). "Gudbrand on the Hillside or What the Good Man Does Is Always Right (Norway)".
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about finding the good in whatever situation one finds oneself in. It is present in many collections of folk tales including
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Gudbrand: A good husband who makes impulsive decisions but has a positive attitude about everything life sends his way.
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Gudbrand's wife: Optimistic and supportive of her husband's decisions; she finds the good in every event.
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The story is about Gudbrand and his wife, who live on a hillside and get along very well. They own two
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Themes of optimism, looking on the bright side, and marital happiness are attributed to this tale.
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tale type index, "Gudbrand on the Hillside" is classified under 1415, Trading Away One's Fortune.
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a bag of rotten apples; and instead of a neighbor, his wager is with two traveling Englishmen.
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Extended Massive Orgasm: how you can give and receive intense sexual pleasure
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Popular Tales from the Norse: With an Introductory Essay on the Origin and ..
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Popular Tales from the Norse: With an Introductory Essay on the Origin and ..
161:, and trades the pig for the goat. He trades his goat with a man who has a 443: 181: 98: 170: 185: 95: 153:, and he trades the cow for the horse. Next, he meets a man with a 157:, and trades the horse for the pig. Then he comes to a man with a 166: 162: 150: 158: 447: 422:(Repr. ed.). Cambridge u.a.: Cambridge Univ. Pr. pp.  419:
Solomonic Judgements: Studies in the Limitations of Rationality
316:(Reprinted in pbk. ed.). Cambridge : Brewer. p. 50. 154: 143: 224:
The benefit of a happy and trusting marriage is one theme.
272:(1st Anchor Books ed.). Garden City, NY: Doubleday. 105:(1982). It was one of many Norse folk tales included in 312:
Davidson, Hilda Ellis; Chauduri, Anna, eds. (2006).
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Then in the same manner he acquires a 976:Hans Christian Andersen Literature Award 408: 406: 385:Bodansky, Steve; Bodansky, Vera (2000). 256: 18: 749:What the Old Man Does is Always Right 337:Garry, Jane; El-Shamy, Hasan (2005). 7: 906:The World of Hans Christian Andersen 374:. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas. 301:. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas. 184:with his neighbor for one hundred 14: 966:International Children's Book Day 268:Best-Loved Folktales of the World 103:Best-Loved Folktales of the World 987: 986: 66:1415, Trading Away One's Fortune 956:Hans Christian Andersen Museums 1: 971:Hans Christian Andersen Award 515:New Fairy Tales. 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Index


Aarne–Thompson
Norske Folkeeventyr
Norwegian
folk tale
Norske Folkeeventyr
Peter Christen Asbjørnsen
Jørgen Engebretsen Moe
Hans Christian Andersen
Nye Eventyr og Historier
cows
horse
pig
goat
sheep
goose
rooster
bet
thalers
Aarne-Thompson
George Webbe Dasent
cognitive dissonance
Johannes V. Jensen
Straw Millionaire
Best-Loved Folktales of the World
ISBN
0385189494
"Notice"
ISBN
1843840812

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