[identity profile] sweettalkeress.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
So recently I was reading this (actually really excellent) Pokemon fanfic, which appears to have been an attempt to iron out a rather confusing Pokedex entry. Basically, the fanfic revolves around the idea that a certain species of Pokemon has a custom that all young male members of the community must kill their own mothers as a rite of passage. Anyone who can’t do it is disgraced and treated as vermin for the rest of his life- failure to kill your own mother is considered a sign of despicable cowardice. The more I thought about this fic, the more I realized that there’s a similar parallel in Harry Potter- except that instead of the message being, “If you’re truly a real man and worthy of belonging, you’ll kill your own family on instruction,” it’s “If you’re truly brave, a true Gryffindor, you’ll kill yourself on instruction.”
 
In Harry Potter we see characters committing ritual suicide on just about any pretext. We see people kill themselves to protect their family (Lily and James), to escape a bad boss (Regulus), as a strategic ploy (Dumbledore), and even to vanquish their enemies (Harry). Granted, it’s quite possible that these people were better off dead than otherwise, given the circumstances; but still, it does seem to be a pattern.
 
Consider the fate of Lily Potter nee Evans. She dies to protect her son, and in doing so, grants him special love protection. Now, it’s stressed again and again that Lily’s sacrifice was so noble and granted Harry the protection specifically because Voldemort offered her a choice about whether or not to live. And it was noble of her to die for her child- but it also established a pattern that the books’ attitudes towards death reinforce: if you’re in big enough trouble, trouble you can’t escape from any other way, die. Preferably as prettily and dramatically as you can manage.
 
Then there’s Regulus. There was another essay on here in which someone, I think it was Terri Testing, puts it out there that Regulus’s search for Slytherin’s locket was not to have the locket destroyed, but to, effectively, commit ritual suicide rather than serve Voldemort any longer. And for this the heroes emphatically reward him.
 
Now consider Peter Pettigrew. Peter Pettigrew is easily one of the most confusing characters Harry Potter ever gave us. He’s pretty much the only Gryffindor who’s never presented in a remotely positive light (at least not once his identity becomes known). The main reason given for this (both by the author and her fans) is that he’s a coward who betrayed Lily and James rather than be killed by Voldemort (granted, we don’t actually know how much of this is true, since the evidence of his cowardice is rather conflicting and since we never get his side of the story- just the main characters’ assumptions). Tellingly, when Sirius confronts him, he specifically goes out of his ways to say that, had Sirius been in his situation, he would have willingly died rather than betray his friends (the fact that Peter easily would have been better off dead than with Voldemort is largely beside the point here, since it’s only DE’s, and never anyone who could be counted among the “good guys” who serve Voldemort out of fear).
 
And then there’s Phineas Nigellus, who makes the statement about Slytherins choosing to save their own necks. This in and of itself is taken as reason to regard Slytherins as contemptible cravens- they won’t kill themselves for any greater good they can come up with (and you could argue that one of the downsides of “ambition” is that you’re motivated to stay around and wait for things to turn in your favor, rather than the Gryffindorish “bravery” of permanently ending your problems through death).
 
To return to the fanfic I read earlier, like most pieces of media dealing with death cults from the inside, the fanfic mostly just illustrates how things are done- it doesn’t take a stance on the morality of the characters’ actions, and the narrator is genuinely conflicted about killing someone he loves so much- but not enough to stop himself from doing it. What makes Harry Potter’s death cult so freaky is that it really does seem as though suicide is treated, not merely as a cornerstone of wizarding culture but *objectively good and righteous.* Throughout the series we meet literally no suicide bombers among the villains (despite the fact that the DE’s are terrorists, and terrorists in the modern world are notorious for suicide bombing). No, the only suicide bomber we meet (so to speak) is Harry Potter- who’s supposed to be the hero we’re meant to admire!
 
So, yeah.

Date: 2011-12-04 07:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] karentheunicorn.livejournal.com
Mawwwage, Mawwage is what brwings us togefer today.

Apparently in the potter universe for a woman the highest goal is to get married and spew out some rugrats.

Hell, look at McGonagall, I never thought she was ever married and low and behold JKR gives info on the Pottermore site about her being married.

Every character gotta get JKR's matchmaker makeovers. No way Tonks you can't be alone, here HAVE a werewolf to make your life miserable.

You can't be happy without a lovekins to wed and heaven forbid you fall in love and the person doesn't love you back; that calls for a blood letting on a dirty shack floor or death after popping out an evil overloard baby.




Date: 2011-12-04 09:28 pm (UTC)
sunnyskywalker: Young Beru Lars from Attack of the Clones; text "Sunnyskywalker" (spandex jackets)
From: [personal profile] sunnyskywalker
There are so few characters in fiction who are not married, not in a relationship, and perfectly fine that way. HP is just following the crows here, unfortunately. Though some of its examples are particularly nasty.

Date: 2011-12-05 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sharaz-jek.livejournal.com
Hell, look at McGonagall, I never thought she was ever married and low and behold JKR gives info on the Pottermore site about her being married.

What. The hell.

Where the hell did this come from? Where the hell did it fit in? What the hell was it relevant to? Is this what JKR meant when she dodged the question about whether any teachers were married?

I don't know. On the one hand I'm glad that McGonagal's portrayed as a woman who moved on from the ending of a marriage* and wasn't defined by her man, on the other hand, why did she even need a marriage, and if JKR wants any credit for it, PUT IT IN THE BOOK! And even looked at charitably, it still comes across as yet another example of Rowling attempting to control interpretations of her characters. Unnecessary and stupid, but with a part of it that can be interpreted in a good way that is nonetheless contradicted by the rest of her work - sums up most of the series, doesn't it?

Date: 2011-12-07 02:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] charlottehywd.livejournal.com
Some feminist JRK is. I really wish that her fans would stop giving her credit for a liberalness she really never has shown in her books.

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