[personal profile] oryx_leucoryx posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
This is the obligatory Dursley chapter, in which we are treated to the home life of this family and learn how inferior they are to wizard families.

Dudley takes up a whole side of the square kitchen table. Ahem, I doubt a square kitchen table (as opposed to a dining room table) was designed to seat 8 people, 2 on a side. His parents excuse away his teachers' accusations of bullying. As opposed to the Weasleys who never receive reports making such heinous accusations against the twins (we'll see the school does occasionally owl their parents, but I don't see any awareness that some of what the twins do is bullying behavior). (This starts the theme of parents dealing with wayward sons in this book.) Dudley is forced into a diet of fruit and vegetables rather than his favorites. From the descriptions we get of the food Harry eats at Hogwarts I get the feeling Harry's favorites are closer to Dudley's than to the health foods, nor does he limit his intake. But somehow Harry remains thin, regardless of whether he gets starved by Petunia or stuffed by Molly or the House-elves.

Changing the food choices of the entire family is a good thing! However adjusting Harry's serving size to Dudley's (perceived?) emotional needs isn't. I don't begrudge Harry for working around a diet he doesn't need, but then I also sympathize with Dudley who does. Changing eating habits of years is hard.
This is also the place to say Dudley must have grown up as an emotional wreck. Knowing that his parents were capable of such physical and emotional deprivation of someone in their care - what if he ever failed to please them? I think a big part of his misbehavior is both making sure his parents know he *isn't* Harry as well as wanting the reassurance that they still love him, no matter what anyone else thinks.

Of Harry's 4 sources of help only one sends food he appreciates. Odd that even Hagrid managed to send an edible birthday cake. But how edible is it (or any of the others) 3 weeks later?

Harry is surprised that the Weasleys wrote directly to the Dursleys. Vernon is embarrassed that they didn't know how many stamps to use. But really, how hard is it to find out? Didn't they go to the post office to buy the stamps? What does it say about the exchange rate between Galleons and pounds that a family so poor finds it reasonable to spend on so many stamps for one letter? Molly's letter sounds as if she is trying too hard to make the Quidditch World Cup sound special and to make Arthur sound important. And of course she doesn't have enough imagination to realize that sending a letter by owl isn't normal for the Dursleys.

Harry is offended on Molly's behalf when Vernon calls her 'dumpy'. Since Molly likes Harry nobody is allowed to notice she is overweight.

I must say that the scene where Harry threatens Vernon with Sirius looks a lot less humorous now that I have seen Harry enjoy torturing a man for punishment, and Sirius engaging in Muggle-baiting.

If I am correct in my understanding that Ron is claiming that he and Molly wrote their respective letters at about the same time, then I am impressed with the UK post. Molly's letter arrived on Saturday morning. Pig arrived the same morning. Considering the speed of owls elsewhere, it looks as though Ron's letter was sent earlier that morning. So a letter got delivered the morning it was sent?

I am less impressed with the Weasleys. They plan on taking Harry regardless of the Dursleys' consent. One could argue that eventually Molly and Arthur realized their sons were not exaggerating when they said Harry had been imprisoned and starved, but seeing how Arthur views the treatment of Muggles, both in this book and in COS, I doubt this made a difference.

Harry is happy specifically because Dudley is suffering and he isn't. The seeds of the bully of HBP and war criminal of DH.

Date: 2011-01-23 01:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mage-989.livejournal.com
I'm wondering, is this a generational thing?

It might also be a regional thing. I'm 25 from Canada, and had to hike through two miles of snow to get to school ;), and in all my university classes that required a term paper a whole page of the course outline was dedicated to plagiarism and the consequences of doing it. Essentially anything that you put in a paper that were not your own words had to be cited. Whether it was an idea, a fact, a theory someone else proposed (in talk or in print) that you wanted to investigate further they had to be given credit. And ignorance was not an excuse if you couldn't track a source down to cite it properly you either got help from the teacher to find it or you couldn't use it.

In other courses it was always the work that mattered. Writing down the right answer got you one point. Showing your work got you the rest. For my teachers it seemed it was important to know why and how you got an answer, that the student understood how things worked. They seemed to want us to go beyond just learning stuff for the test.

I'm actually surprised there is such a debate about Harry's actions because it comes across to me as the way it did in the very special episode about cheating in children's shows. The character gets some advantage that's let them do better in class or game and over the course of the episode it's taken away and then the character can't perform the task or do well on the test, because they haven't learned how to do it. The cheating has been a crutch to pass the class or game without trying.

This IMHO is exactly what Harry does. He gets the book with another student's notes in it and uses those notes to gain an advantage. But when he hides the book he has to use the old recipes and he doesn't know why the Prince made the changes he did so he can't use that knowledge and apply it to other potions. Harry hasn't learned anything, and his performance in class reflects that. He can't do the work on his own, because the work before wasn't his it was Snape's.

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