A Headmaster other than Albus
Jan. 22nd, 2012 10:28 pmSo here is an idea for an AU scenario. Anyone is free to develop it into a fic, but we can just discuss the what-if:
Sometime between November 2nd 1981 and July 1991 Albus Dumbledore died suddenly. Maybe in some magical mishap, maybe a sudden heart attack, whatever. The important bit is he didn't expect this to happen and had no time to do any ad-hoc cover-ups nor did he have a chance to influence the choice of his replacement or to incorporate his death into some plot. The permanent replacement is chosen by the Board of Governors. If this happens early enough Lucius isn't yet on the board, if later he is on, but probably still trying to earn a reputation as an outstanding member of society who would have never joined forces with Voldemort willingly so I don't think he'd support anyone blatantly against the inclusion of Muggleborns. Anyway, the replacement turns out to be someone not as outwardly impressive as Dumbles - not so showy, with perhaps average or slightly above average magical performance, but a capable administrator with good organizational and interpersonal skills, but most importantly someone who cares about the students' well-being and education. It can be someone from Slughorn's network or even someone who thought well of Albus as long as s/he didn't have a chance to look too closely at how Hogwarts was run, but definitely not an Order member or any other close associate of Dumbles. Maybe an older, more experienced and less idealistic version of Percy.
The members of the Hogwarts staff are as we know them in PS (Care of Magical Creatures is taught by Kettleburn, Hagrid is still a groundskeeper), except for DADA. Depending on timing, Quirrell might be the Muggle Studies teacher. I think the DADA curse should still be active, so the teachers are still being replaced annually (we don't want the new school Head to have it too easy).
So I think this new person shows up and tries to run Hogwarts like a normal school. Some teachers object because that's not the way it was always done, some are relieved to have a professional in charge for a change. The handling of disciplinary matters changes. The inter-House politics change.
And then in the summer of 1991 Quirrell comes back from a sabbatical with a personally transplant. And one Harry Potter oddly doesn't reply to his acceptance letter to Hogwarts. (I doubt the new Head had a reason to look into Harry's situation of hir own initiative earlier, but maybe someone can make a convincing argument for that?) So what now?
Sometime between November 2nd 1981 and July 1991 Albus Dumbledore died suddenly. Maybe in some magical mishap, maybe a sudden heart attack, whatever. The important bit is he didn't expect this to happen and had no time to do any ad-hoc cover-ups nor did he have a chance to influence the choice of his replacement or to incorporate his death into some plot. The permanent replacement is chosen by the Board of Governors. If this happens early enough Lucius isn't yet on the board, if later he is on, but probably still trying to earn a reputation as an outstanding member of society who would have never joined forces with Voldemort willingly so I don't think he'd support anyone blatantly against the inclusion of Muggleborns. Anyway, the replacement turns out to be someone not as outwardly impressive as Dumbles - not so showy, with perhaps average or slightly above average magical performance, but a capable administrator with good organizational and interpersonal skills, but most importantly someone who cares about the students' well-being and education. It can be someone from Slughorn's network or even someone who thought well of Albus as long as s/he didn't have a chance to look too closely at how Hogwarts was run, but definitely not an Order member or any other close associate of Dumbles. Maybe an older, more experienced and less idealistic version of Percy.
The members of the Hogwarts staff are as we know them in PS (Care of Magical Creatures is taught by Kettleburn, Hagrid is still a groundskeeper), except for DADA. Depending on timing, Quirrell might be the Muggle Studies teacher. I think the DADA curse should still be active, so the teachers are still being replaced annually (we don't want the new school Head to have it too easy).
So I think this new person shows up and tries to run Hogwarts like a normal school. Some teachers object because that's not the way it was always done, some are relieved to have a professional in charge for a change. The handling of disciplinary matters changes. The inter-House politics change.
And then in the summer of 1991 Quirrell comes back from a sabbatical with a personally transplant. And one Harry Potter oddly doesn't reply to his acceptance letter to Hogwarts. (I doubt the new Head had a reason to look into Harry's situation of hir own initiative earlier, but maybe someone can make a convincing argument for that?) So what now?
no subject
Date: 2012-01-26 03:46 am (UTC)In order to figure out what made HP so popular, you have to compare it with other kids' series that came out at about the same time, such as Warriors, Percy Jackson, and Series of Unfortunate Events. If you look at the differences between those series and HP, you can see what makes HP so popular--and it isn't pretty.
no subject
Date: 2012-01-26 03:51 am (UTC)If you look at the differences between those series and HP, you can see what makes HP so popular--and it isn't pretty.
Do tell ...
(Okay, I'll wait for your article.)
no subject
Date: 2012-01-26 04:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-01-27 05:03 am (UTC)*Which is where you get the trope of the kid who's always getting beaten up for his lunch money.
no subject
Date: 2012-01-27 05:09 am (UTC)I'm not so sure how breakfast works, but in my district it seems only those schools that have a high percent of students from low income families even serve breakfast (kids who qualify for free lunch also qualify for free breakfast, others can buy it, I'm not sure what happens to low-income kids in schools where the number of low-income students is under the cut-off).
no subject
Date: 2012-01-27 06:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-01-28 07:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-01-28 06:57 am (UTC)I don't really blame the schools, though. They're cooking for hundreds of people at each school, trying to find something reasonably nutritious and economical that the kids will eat. It's a very hard job, particularly when you consider most Americans don't eat that well to begin with, so even if the schools do offer better foods, the kids may not eat it because they're used to having junk at home.
no subject
Date: 2012-01-28 05:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-01-28 06:53 pm (UTC)