[identity profile] for-diddled.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
* First of all, sorry this is so late, I'm afraid I've been a bit busy preparing to go back to university.

* This is the chapter in which Hermione officially crosses the line from “occasionally strident and self-righteous but on the whole likeable and sympathetic character” to “dangerous sociopath”.

* “‘A gorgeous centaur...’ sighed Parvati.” I must say that, given the, erm, associations of centaurs in classical mythology, this sort of thing rather creeps me out. Is JKR aware of the implications of what she’s writing? Or did she just throw it in without bothering to think it through?

* Hermione’s dropping dark hints about what Umbridge is going to do, revealing the plot like any good author avatar would.

* So Harry can remember the names of centaurs he met once four years ago, but in DH he won’t be able to remember a face from a picture from one chapter to the next. *coughplotconveniencecough*

* Wow, centaurs sure are arrogant and condescending people. No wonder Dumbledore felt enough of an affinity with Firenze to hire him as a teacher. He recognises a kindred spirit when he sees one.

* If I were JKR, I’d be hesitant to dignify the wizarding conflicts with the term “war”. They’re more like gang wars than what most people would think of as warfare. Which is why epic fantasy doesn’t really mix with a “secret magical people in this world” plot. Epic fantasy generally centres around mighty empires, big wars and bloody battles, but these things are generally quite noticeable, and any wizards fighting in large-scale conflicts would be found out pretty quickly. So the wizarding war pretty much has to be low-key to make it plausible that Muggles wouldn’t know about it, and the end result is that we get a lot of build-up and very little payoff.

* Firenze spends the whole lesson teaching them something which he doesn’t expect them to do anyway, and which is anyway a bit uncertain and useless. So he’s about as good as the average Hogwarts teacher, then.

* “Indeed, Harry sometimes wondered how Umbridge was going to react when all the members of the DA received ‘Outstanding’ in their Defence Against the Dark Arts OWLs.” Only kidding, Harry will be the only one to get an “Outstanding” mark, because he’s a Mary Sue just the most awesome DADA student ever.

* Although everybody always goes on about how smart Hermione is, and from what we see of her she doesn’t seem noticeably worse in DADA than she does in other subjects, so if she only got an “E” in her Defence OWL, that’s probably because Harry’s not a very good teacher... :p

* Seamus’ Patronus “was definitely something hairy”. *mind goes into the gutter*

* Hermione’s Patronus is an otter, even though she’s one of the least otter-like people in the series. On a Doylist level, this is probably because JKR’s favourite animal is the otter, so her author avatar will have one as her Patronus, obviously. On a Watsonian level, perhaps Patronuses don’t represent what your personality is like, but what you need to guard you and keep you out of trouble. So Hermione’s is an otter because she needs fun-loving people around her to stop her getting too serious about everything, Ron’s is a weasel because he needs smart people to compensate for his mental inadequacy, and Harry’s is a stag because he needs a proper father-figure to help him, not an abusive one like Uncle Vernon or a scheming and manipulative one like Dumbledore. Patronuses which change when somebody falls in love show that their caster needs to be loved by their intended in order to feel happy and secure again.

* Dobby appears, wearing “his usual eight woollen hats”. I quite like the suggestion that it was this sight that made Hermione drop her SPEW activities, as she saw that her hats were all going to this one elf, and that they were therefore pretty useless from a freeing people standpoint. (Can anybody remember if SPEW is brought up again in this book?)

* Umbridge is here! I bet it’s times like this that the DA wish they had a second, secret entrance from the ROR. That way they could slip away while Umbridge and her cronies sat uselessly in front of the main entrance.

* Draco’s concealed “beneath an ugly dragon-shaped vase”, to match his ugly and monstrous soul.

* Umbridge has “an indecent excitement in her voice”. I wonder if this is how Hermione would sound to those on the receiving end of her little schemes.

* When I first read this scene, I didn’t really mind the “Sneak” curse, because I just sort of assumed that Madam Pomfrey managed to find a way of removing them after a couple of weeks. Then we found out that she still had the scars years later and... yikes.

* Not only is that extremely vindictive, but it doesn’t actually help the DA in any way. It didn’t stop them being betrayed in the first place, and it didn’t alert them to the fact that Umbridge was coming to get them. If this had been a one-off incident and the curse hadn’t been permanent, I’d be inclined to put it down to youthful lack of thought, but when you compare it to some of Hermione’s other actions (her treatment of Rita Skeeter, or sending those canaries after Ron), it seems like a rather worrying pattern is starting to emerge...

* Minerva gets all self-righteous about Willy Widdershins being let off. I wonder whether she feels the same about Mundungus Fletcher, or whether petty crooks are OK just as long as they’re on her side.

* Also, she’s not above a bit of petty corruption herself, since she lets Gryffindor Quidditch players off homework when a match is coming up.

* So Kingsley memory-wipes Marietta to stop her telling. You know, this is exactly the sort of mentality that leads DEs to Imperius people and get them to do their bidding: not caring about your victims’ autonomy, just violating their minds when it’s convenient to do so.

* Also, if they are going to mind-wipe Marietta, why not do it to Percy, Fudge and Umbridge too? That would get them out of trouble entirely.

* And really guys, Umbridge has a list of DA members and access to Veritaserum. Obliviating one witness shouldn’t be enough.

* I’m surprised Umbridge thought she could get away with manhandling students like that in front of Dumbledore. I mean, that man’s just so concerned about his students’ welfare.

* Hermione left the membership list pinned to the ROR wall. Well done, Hermione. Not that any DA members will point out this idiocy to her. Nor will they point out the fact that her defensive jinx was (a) vindictive and useless, and (b) not told about to them when they joined up. Maybe they’re all worried she’ll brand the word “COMPLAINER” across their forehead if they speak up.

* Dumbledore taking the rap is all very noble and everything, but I don’t see how it’s meant to help. Fudge can still charge the pupils with attending, even if they didn’t organise it, and now Dumbledore’s ensured that he’s going to be on the run and unable to give them any help.

* Face-scarring aside, I actually quite liked this chapter. It was quite well-paced, and I never really felt like I was wading through pages of filler. It will be interesting to see if the other chapters will be more like this now the book’s reaching its climax, or whether the quality will slip back down again.

Date: 2011-09-30 07:01 pm (UTC)
sunnyskywalker: Young Beru Lars from Attack of the Clones; text "Sunnyskywalker" (spandex jackets)
From: [personal profile] sunnyskywalker
Sure there's a reason she might try to shut Umbridge up that has nothing to do with empathy: getting Umbridge chased off or distracted is one thing, but if she actually gets hurt, then Hermione could get in trouble later. That's what she worried about when they knocked out Snape in PoA. Plus, if the centaurs get angry enough, it might interfere with the kids escaping to go help Sirius. I don't see any reason to assume she's actually worried about Umbridge's welfare for Umbridge's sake.

Sociopaths will absolutely help people when it serves their own purposes. They might be nice to old ladies whose magical artifacts they intend to steal later, for instance. They might volunteer for charity events if it gets them a good reputation (a useful thing to have) or lets them meet people they intend to use. They can rail against injustice so others will think well of them, or to wind people up, or for any number of reasons. Which isn't to stay that Hermione is definitely a sociopath, but it doesn't rule it out - sociopaths aren't committed to never doing any good deeds for any reason, just to not doing good deeds that don't also benefit them in some way. Hermione could have started the house-elf campaign without having genuine empathy for the elves. (Lynn and Oryx have covered that part pretty well, I think.)

Date: 2011-10-01 01:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] madderbrad.livejournal.com
Which isn't to stay that Hermione is definitely a sociopath, but it doesn't rule it out - sociopaths aren't committed to never doing any good deeds for any reason, just to not doing good deeds that don't also benefit them in some way. Hermione could have started the house-elf campaign without having genuine empathy for the elves.

Okay, so we're still at a place where we reject for_diddled's claim that Hermione is a sociopath. I'm saying she's not; you're saying she doesn't look like one. Your argument that it's all an 'act' could be used against almost any canon character - Ron's a secret sociopath (certainly he's much less caring of others than Hermione), Ginny intends to become a Dark Lady (through Harry?) and so forth. If we can jettison any any canon evidence/behaviour that doesn't fit our theory then almost any theory is possible.

Sociopaths will absolutely help people when it serves their own purposes.

But Hermione's actions rarely served Hermione. No, she was trying to save Buckbeak, save the elves, or save Harry.

Date: 2011-10-02 04:25 pm (UTC)
sunnyskywalker: Young Beru Lars from Attack of the Clones; text "Sunnyskywalker" (spandex jackets)
From: [personal profile] sunnyskywalker
And Lucius Malfoy really cares about the sick kids at St. Mungo's? Well, maybe, but I've never seen any evidence of that. But we know that he thinks giving a bunch of money to people he might not give a damn about will benefit him - indirectly, in the long run. Charity serves Lucius's interests. Just because freeing the elves wouldn't benefit Hermione directly right at this moment doesn't mean it's necessarily all for the elves, any more than Lucius's donations are necessarily all for the sick kids.

"Maybe Hermione didn't want Umbridge to mess up the escape" isn't just a random explanation you can pull out of a hat; it actually makes sense for the circumstances. Now, if we said she was planning this whole escape to win Harry's trust so she could make him her puppet to her Dark Lady Puppetmaster someday, that would be dismissing evidence to make things fit theories. But that she might want to actually escape, and that wanting to escape doesn't tell us one way or another whether she genuinely feels concern for Umbridge? Um, not really a stretch.

Date: 2011-10-06 11:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] madderbrad.livejournal.com
The cases are totally different. Malfoy's charity serves him, as you point out. Not only does freeing the elves NOT benefit Hermione - as you say - there's absolutely no sign, none whatsoever, that (a) she sees any benefit coming to her, EVER, or (b) that there's any other reason for Hermione to do what she does.

That's circular reasoning, basically; "Hermione is evil because she's aiding the house elves for her own self interest; oh, we can't see how it will help her, but we're sure it will, because she's evil". No, sorry.

Date: 2011-10-06 08:40 pm (UTC)
sunnyskywalker: Young Beru Lars from Attack of the Clones; text "Sunnyskywalker" (spandex jackets)
From: [personal profile] sunnyskywalker
*sigh* Okay, let me try again. If I understand your argument, you're saying that because Hermione says she is concerned for the house-elves and because there isn't another reason she might help them spelled out in bold type, then that must mean the ONLY POSSIBLY MOTIVE she could have is true empathy for the house-elves. What I am saying is that just because Hermione doesn't directly say otherwise and because we can't see an immediate, direct benefit after thinking about it for half a second doesn't mean there is no possible other motive, whether instead of or in addition to actually caring about the house-elves for their own sake.

Take real-world abolitionism in the US for an example: plenty of people worked for abolition before and during the Civil War, but did nothing or sided with Southerners after Reconstruction ended and lynchings became massively more common. Why? There's lots of possible reasons, and they could all be true for different people; the one thing we do know is that a lot of people who had been pro-abolition were not to be particularly pro-black rights or to have a lot of sympathy for blacks, and plenty were actually quite racist. (Frederick Douglass calls out the generally decent people, not just the bigots, for this - "Even the noble and good Mr. Lincoln, one of the best men that ever lived" is noted as having a warped lack of sympathy on occasion and blaming slaves for causing the war by existing for white people to fight about in The Lesson of the Hour, among other places and among other related issues.)

So. If real people can be anti-slavery - maybe even get teary-eyed over sad scenes in novels or passing by slaves while on a road trip - without actually caring about the people they want to free, and even despising them sometimes, then I don't think it's reasonable to assume that the only reason a fictional character could possibly want to free the magical slaves is having a pure and empathetic heart (unless you believe that since that's probably what the author intended it to mean, therefore that's all it does mean), and it's fair to examine the situation more carefully. Might Hermione believe that attacking wizards' social hierarchy at any point - in this case, house-elves' position - would benefit other groups supposedly low in the hierarchy, like Muggleborns? If house-elves can become free citizens, after all, then the boundaries of "most different kind of person we accept as a citizen" has shifted, with Muggleborns suddenly not on the lowest rung. Now, I don't know that she's that cynical - and it's possible to have that self-serving motive and genuinely care about house-elves simultaneously anyway - but the point is that there could be (long term, possibly indirect) benefits to her, and real people have been in her position without actually being moral paragons who care about the slaves as people, so I don't think we can dismiss it out of hand either. (There's also the "not entirely rational psychology" possibility that she sees in the house-elves how she would feel in that situation, and is essentially reacting to a mirror image of herself. I've heard the argument that this was in fact the motive of many female abolitionists who later gave up abolitionism for suffrage instead of doing both - they saw similarities between their condition and slavery, but didn't have strong feelings about the slaves themselves and it was easy to give it up once they got involved in their own movement.)

Again, I am NOT saying "Hermione is definitely evil and has never done a good thing ever." I'm saying that she has done some things that look seriously dodgy which I can't explain away, and also that some of the other things she has done may or may not be due to empathy or more cynical motives, and we do not know for sure, so assuming that she's perfect is jumping the gun.

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