[identity profile] mary-j-59.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
This quote was in our advent bulletin, and it struck me very strongly.
There are no ordinary people. You have never talked to a mere mortal. Nations, cultures, arts, civilizations – these are mortal, and their life is to ours as the life of a gnat.

That, of course, is C.S. Lewis. I believe the quote is taken from Mere Christianity. Once upon a time, when the Potter books were becoming enormously popular, Rowling gave an interview - I think in Time magazine. In this interview, she took some pains to distinguish herself from C.S. Lewis. One thing I remember her saying is that her books were different from his because, in hers, the children would be allowed to grow up. One can ask whether, in the end, the trio did grow up. I rather think not. But that's not the major difference I see in the two authors' works.

If you read the Narnia books attentively, you can see that Lewis really believed the extraordinary statement he made above. Yes, from a modern pov, one can read him as racist and sexist. But NO ONE in the Narnia books is condemned because of their birth, social status, or genetic heritage. Everyone has free will and everyone, in the end, can choose to come to Aslan's country. It's up to them whether they will so choose or not.

In the Potter books, there is a sort of Venn diagram of specialness. The vast majority of people are Muggles. They cannot even see Hogwarts, and the special people treat them, at best, with condescension. Inside this large circle is a tiny one, of all the Witches and Wizards. They are the real human beings, the people who matter. Inside this tiny circle, again, is another circle, consisting of perhaps 1/4 of the magical people. These are the Gryffindors, and they are the elect.*

Nobody can choose to be magical, as Calormenes like Emeth and Aravis, Dwarves like Poggin and Trumpkin, beasts like Reepicheep and Puzzle, and ordinary humans like the Pevensie parents can choose to love Aslan. If Muggles could choose magic, Petunia would surely have accompanied Lily to Hogwarts. She didn't. You are either born a Wizard, or you're nothing.

Nor, some fans to the contrary, do you get to choose whether you're a Gryffindor. We've all beaten this dead horse repeatedly, I know, but it's worth repeating. Dumbledore does not tell Harry that our choices make us what we are. He says our choices show what we are. If we choose to be in Gryffindor, that is because we are predestined to be among the elect. If we choose to be in Slytherin, then there is probably no help for us - at least, not as far as I can see.

Against this background of extreme privilege, Rowling attempts to tell a story in which racism is the primary evil. The fact that every Witch and Wizard we see is racist against Muggles simply doesn't matter - because Muggles don't matter. And there is no analysis, in the books, of how anti-Muggle racism leads naturally to anti-Muggleborn racism. It's perfectly okay to mock and torment the Dursleys. But it's not okay to mock and torment Hermione, who is a Witch. It's especially not okay to mock Harry, the hero.

Contrast this, again, with Lewis. He says, ...it is immortals whom we joke with, work with, marry, snub, and exploit–immortal horrors or everlasting splendours...Next to the Blessed Sacrament itself, your neighbor is the holiest object presented to your senses.

Quite a contrast, isn't it? Whatever you think of Lewis, ask yourself this: what sort of boy would Harry have become if he had realized, even for one moment, that Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia were immortals?

Just a thought.

Date: 2011-12-19 01:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pearlette.livejournal.com
/cont:

If we choose to be in Slytherin, then there is probably no help for us - at least, not as far as I can see.

Since JKR does include at least three/four redeemed Slytherins – Snape, Horace, arguably Draco or Regulus – I cannot agree that she condemns the House outright. Yes, I would have much preferred a far more nuanced (and downright grown-up) portrayal of Slytherin in the series but actually I think we got that portrayal in SNAPE. For me, his character makes up for a lot (and I don’t care a hoot whether Rowling intended that or not. ;) )

It seems to me that Rowling wrote herself into a pickle. In the first two books, which are children’s stories and not yet the Young Adult genre of the later books, the Slytherins are pretty much pantomime villains and are treated as such. But as the series progressed and darkened, and as its readership matured, obviously that one-dimensional view of Slytherin no longer suffices. Which is why readers get twitchy. But then at least there’s Snape ... and Horace. Two nuanced and interesting characters.

Against this background of extreme privilege, Rowling attempts to tell a story in which racism is the primary evil. The fact that every Witch and Wizard we see is racist against Muggles simply doesn't matter - because Muggles don't matter.

Muggles don’t matter much in this fictional universe because they serve pretty much as plot devices and nothing else (Hermione’s parents being a prime example). Rowling’s magical people at best show a puzzled paternalism towards Muggles. I wouldn’t call that racism: to me it just show that the Potterverse is not a fully realised world. Rowling’s Muggle Britain is nothing like the real Britain and it’s not meant to be, either. The Prime Minister is purely fictional – she wasn’t intending that guy to represent John Major or Tony Blair!

It's perfectly okay to mock and torment the Dursleys.

Yes, because they’re douchebags who abuse a child. I’m totally OK with mocking people like that, especially in fiction! Their abusiveness has got nothing to do with their being Muggles. We see plenty of abusive wizards, after all.

It's especially not okay to mock Harry, the hero.

I’m not sure what you mean by this. Who mocks Harry? (Voldemort? Of course he mocks Harry, LOL, that’s his job. :D) Who else mocks Harry? Snape? That’s complicated: many readers, including me, don’t approve of Snape’s bitterness towards Harry (just for the crime of being James’s son) but also think that sometimes his discipline of Harry is merited (since Harry can sometimes be a prat). Seriously, I don’t know what you mean by this or who you are directing this comment at: other characters in the Potterverse? or the actual reader?

Profile

deathtocapslock: (Default)
death to capslock

September 2025

S M T W T F S
 1 23456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 7th, 2026 05:34 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios