http://terri-testing.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] terri-testing.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] deathtocapslock2012-02-05 08:49 am

Excuses for Hagrid’s Brutality

Sigh. I just realized we may have to give Hagrid a partial miss for his crimes. It might not be the case that Rita’s simply right about the nature of half-giants, or at least of this half-giant: that they are naturally as brutal as they are stupid.



I’m speaking here of his active crimes of violence, not his repeated crimes of endangering children through incompetence and denial that dangerous creatures, are.

We saw Hagrid engage in acts of violence three times:

In book one, Hagrid got angry because someone insulted Dumbledore, and in retaliation Hagrid tried to turn the insulter’s son into a pig. He succeeded only in giving the (blameless, so far as he knew) child a pig’s tail, which was removed eventually by Muggle surgeons. The victim endured a month of terror and abject humiliation, six months of constant pain, and PTSD that endured to our last canon view of him.

In book four, a visiting dignitary insulted Dumbledore, and Hagrid slammed the wizard up against a tree and tried to choke him. To put this in context, Hagrid is almost twice as tall as an adult male, and three to five times as broad. So the visual image the reader should be creating is best approximated by imagining Vernon Dursley slamming around and choking a slight four- or five-year-old child, such as we imagine Harry to have been.

And in book five, Dolores Umbridge very sensibly decides to sack Hagrid for his gross incompetence on the quiet and with backup. And he responds by violently attacking her and her entourage. (We have Harry’s witness of the incident: Umbridge and her entourage knocked politely and entered quietly, if at a godforsaken hour. After she/they talked to Hagrid for a time, Hagrid started roaring in fury and then banged open the door of the hut. At which point Harry saw “a massive figure roaring and brandishing his fists, surrounded by six people, all of whom, judging by the tiny threads of red light they were casting in his direction, seemed to be attempting to Stun him.”

IOW, Hagrid apparently initiated the violence, and the Ministry flacks are trying to make him go quietly without hurting him.

And then when someone stuns (not hurts or kills) Fang, “Hagrid gave a howl of fury, lifted the culprit bodily from the ground, and threw him. The man flew what looked like ten feet and did not get up again….”

I remind the reader, this is the equivalent of a large, robust man physically assaulting a very small child.

Then McGonagall (who had not witnessed any of the preceding) dashes out, seeing only that Hagrid is fighting physically with Umbridge and several Ministry officials.

She screams, “Leave him alone. Alone, I say! On what grounds are you attacking him? He has done nothing, nothing to warrant such—”

(Jumping to conclusions a bit, Minnie? He attacked them. Though Umbridge had clearly anticipated that he might.)

And Minerva is hit by four stunners. (Not five. Which suggests that Hagrid has by then killed/hurt/incapacitated yet another of the Ministy officials who are trying only to stun him and remove him peaceably from Hogwarts grounds.)

“COWARDS!” bellowed Hagrid. “RUDDY COWARDS! HAVE SOME OF THAT—AN’ THAT---”

And he proceeds to knock cold the two nearest Ministry officials; the third (and final) flinches back and falls over a colleague’s body, and Hagrid takes that opportunity to gather up Fang and run away to join Albus Hood in the Sherwood Forest.

Leaving the almost-dead Minerva to be taken up by those whom she’d attacked and by them tenderly brought to Pomfrey for resuscitation.

Which they did.

Evil, evil Ministry! Saving the life of (and failing to press charges against) someone who’d attacked Ministry officials performing their official duty!

And Hagrid---how well does he conform in these scenes to Skeeter’s worst prognostications regarding giant blood?

Abjectly stupid and given to outbursts of violence, anyone?

*

Only—here’s the thing.

First year, the magical attack against Dudley—if Hagrid had transformed a wizard’s child into a pig, or given a witch’s son a pig’s tail—well, any half-way competent witch or wizard parent could probably have undone the spell hirself. At worst, the parents would have taken the child to St. Mungo’s and, after six hours in the waiting room while the actually WORRISOME magical mishaps were triaged around the unhappy trio, a mediwitch would have set the child to rights in half a minute. Painlessly, scarlessly, with no lasting effects.

The attack against Dudley was significantly hurtful mostly because the parents were helpless to reverse it (and no one else offered to). So Dudley suffered a month of an utterly humiliating deformity, six months of pain after surgery, and a lifetime of an impossible-to-explain intimate (sexually-charged) scar. (In 100 Years of Solitude, a pig’s tail leads to lifelong celibacy and eventual suicide from the protagonist’s attempting to remove it.)

But does anyone care to try to make the case that these consequences were (or could have been) foreseen by someone like Hagrid?

In fact, had Hagrid’s spell actually been fully successful, Dudley would never have suffered even emotionally. He’d have been a pig, caring only about being fed and shitting. It was his dad who would have suffered, watching his cherished son contentedly wallowing at his feet.

So. Hagrid only ever meant to hurt Vernon, not Dudley; he didn’t register that the readily-reversible spell he cast was not, in fact, easily reversed by Muggles; and it’s wildly unlikely that he understood, even after the fact, that he had inflicted lifelong terror and sexual humiliation on a little boy.

Regarding his other crimes of violence, his physical assaults upon much smaller, comparatively helpless humans….

Well. What, exactly, did we speculate was the effect of prolonged exposure to Dementors?

Hagrid spent several months in Azkaban. What HE recognized as his incarceration’s effect was the one that the Ministry hoped to achieve: he wasn’t willing ever again to plan to do anything that he understood to be considered a Ministry-recognized crime, lest he be thrown back to the Dementors.

What did Lupin claim to be the effect of long-term exposure? To be reduced to “something like itself… soulless and evil. You’ll be left with nothing but the worst experiences of your life.”

So in justice to Hagrid, I must state: of the three times we see him viciously assault helpless victims, the first time he couldn’t comprehend how truly heinous the assault was (not possessing either the experience or the imagination to realize the attack’s full horror for a Muggle victim). The second and third attacks, came after Hagrid had been subjected to long-term Dementor exposure.

So we don’t know if he’d have reacted with such animalistic brutality before.

Indeed, Minerva’s reaction suggests that she believes he would not have. She’ s known him for forty years or more, and she assumes instantly that if he’s fighting, it’s because the others attacked him.

[identity profile] ladyhadhafang.livejournal.com 2012-02-05 04:58 pm (UTC)(link)
That's definitely true, I say. :)

*sighs*

I guess I just -- of all the reasons to give Dudley a pig's tail, it was his dad saying something about Dumbledore that Hagrid didn't like?
I mean -- dude, I guess I get it a little, but at least...go for an option that *doesn't* involve Disproportionate Retribution.

(Or maybe I'm being a bit soft?)

[identity profile] condwiramurs.livejournal.com 2012-02-05 05:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Interesting thoughts to consider.

However, it still doesn't quite account for Hagrid's choice to passive-aggressively use the man's *child* against him, instead of directly punishing Vernon himself. It's the only time in canon, IIRC, that he does such a thing; all of his other attacks are direct, and involve simple physical violence. So why that time does he, 1) choose passive-aggressiveness and 2) go unthinkingly for the *wand,* which supposedly this is a rare opportunity for him to use, and not for his standard style of direct physical engagement? It's not like he takes the time to consider - it's an immediate unthinking response. It stands out because the entire style of the attack isn't quite Hagrid's normal style.

[identity profile] annoni-no.livejournal.com 2012-02-06 09:46 am (UTC)(link)
It could be that Hagrid had been running over what spells he did remember in case he needed to use them to either reach Harry in order to retrieve him, or to protect him if he was truly in danger. We also know that he was expelled fairly early in his Hogwarts career, but practices little bits of magic on the side.

If I were to guess at his reasoning in focusing on a transfiguration spell, he might have thought that such a display would be the most likely to impress (intimidate) the muggles into letting Harry go with minimal additional fuss. So when Vernon insulted Dumbles, he had already been thinking about transfiguring something for a while, which is why the first thing he grabbed was his wand. Unfortunately, he never had completed his schooling and making pumpkins grow larger, faster, isn't quite the same thing as turning a boy into a pig, and he overreached his abilities.

As for why he would target Dudley instead of Vernon himself, I'm not sure.
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[identity profile] nx74defiant.livejournal.com 2012-02-06 06:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Dumbledore has quite a collection of 'pets', hasn't he? He has a tamed Death Eater as his Potions Master, but that one is trule harmless; a snarling dog who never had any teeth, who doesn't snarl because he is about to attack you but because he hopes that if he snarls loud enough you will refrain from attacking him, because abuse is all that he has ever known. Then there is the pet werewolf and the pet half giant, and these might *look* like tailwagging pets, but they are indeed very dangerous, which is why Dumbledore collected them in the first place.

I love your descriptions.

And with a dangerous pet the real responsibility is with the owner. Another reason I can't stand Dumbledore.

[identity profile] danajsparks.livejournal.com 2012-02-07 12:47 am (UTC)(link)
----In book one, Hagrid got angry because someone insulted Dumbledore

----In book four, a visiting dignitary insulted Dumbledore

It's interesting how the first two times we see Hagrid react violently, it's in response to somebody insulting Dumbledore. Also interesting is the parallel between Hagrid assaulting Karkaroff for spitting at Dumbledore and Harry crucioing Amycus Carrow for spitting at McGonagall. Apparently, spitting at someone is highly offensive in wizarding culture!

----To put this in context, Hagrid is almost twice as tall as an adult male, and three to five times as broad. So the visual image the reader should be creating is best approximated by imagining Vernon Dursley slamming around and choking a slight four- or five-year-old child

I think Rowling's description of Hagrid as being "almost twice as tall as a normal man and at least five times as wide" is hyperbole. I don't think he's literally between 11 and 12 feet tall. Hagrid and Madam Maxime are both able to pass as fully human. The tallest human ever recorded was just shy of 9 feet. The tallest human alive today is 8'3". So, if Hagrid were much taller than 8 feet, he'd be breaking the Statute of Secrecy if he entered the Muggle world.

So the comparison, I think, is more like Vernon and a slight 8 or 9-year-old child.

-----And in book five, Dolores Umbridge very sensibly decides to sack Hagrid for his gross incompetence on the quiet and with backup.

I wonder what exactly Umbridge was trying to accomplish with Hagrid. I suspect that firing him from the CoMC teaching position was not her sole purpose. Since Hagrid was also the groundskeeper, he would have been able to remain at Hogwarts if he were only being removed from the CoMC post, but it seems like Umbridge and the Aurors were trying to remove him from Hogwarts altogether. It's not surprising that he was far from pleased about being evicted from his home of over fifty years in the middle of the night.

And where did Umbridge want Hagrid to go, instead? Did she simply want him gone from Hogwarts, like with Trelawney, or did she have a specific destination in mind? The presence of the Aurors gives the impression that she wanted to send him to Azkaban. That's what the kids seemed to believe, anyway. Ron says, "At least they didn't get to take Hagrid off to Azkaban. And perhaps they were right. Maybe Umbridge gave Hagrid an ultimatum--either leave Hogwarts peacefully now or be arrested and go to prison. Or maybe the only reason that Hagrid was not in Azkaban in the first place was because he had been in Dumbledore's custody, instead. And Dumbledore was currently AWOL.

----And he responds by violently attacking her and her entourage.

We know that Hagrid let out a roar inside the cabin; we don't know if he actually attacked anyone before he ran outside. His primary objective here may have been to try to escape before the Aurors could escort him off the property and/or take him to Azkaban; he wasn't necessarily attacking them just because he was angry about being fired.

----Evil, evil Ministry! Saving the life of (and failing to press charges against) someone who’d attacked Ministry officials performing their official duty!

Only, Minerva didn't attack them. Yes, she was shouting at them, but there's no mention of her firing any spells or even having her wand out. Prof. Tofty, the examiner, was certainly surprised that they stunned her. “Galloping gargoyles!” shouted Professor Tofty, who seemed to have forgotten the exam completely. “Not so much as a warning! Outrageous behavior!”

----And Hagrid---how well does he conform in these scenes to Skeeter’s worst prognostications regarding giant blood? Abjectly stupid and given to outbursts of violence, anyone?

Well, there's plenty of evidence that Hagrid is a bit slow, in some ways. But is he any more prone to violence than any other wizard? The wizarding world, after all, is a very violent culture, in general. I mean, even relatively mild Arthur physically attacks someone in the middle of a bookstore! So I'm not sure if three violent outbursts over the course of seven years is really all that exceptional.
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[personal profile] sunnyskywalker 2012-02-07 01:28 am (UTC)(link)
That's an interesting idea: has Hagrid actually been on parole all these years, not entirely "free"? They didn't convict him for Myrtle's death, iirc, but possessing an XXXXX creature in an inhabited space - which is bad enough to get your wand snapped. But maybe he would have been in Azkaban too (or maybe he was also convicted of the wizarding equivalent of accidental manslaughter on account of it presumably being his monster that caused the death, if they make such fine distinctions, and he and Dumbledore never mentioned this detail to Harry). Are there any other details I'm forgetting to contradict or support this idea?

[identity profile] condwiramurs.livejournal.com 2012-02-09 04:23 am (UTC)(link)
I think the 'failing to press charges against' refers to the fact that *Hagrid* was never charged with attacking the Ministry officials.

[identity profile] danajsparks.livejournal.com 2012-02-11 06:05 am (UTC)(link)
----In fact, that crime (which would certainly justify removing Hagrid from the grounds of Hogwarts altogether) MIGHT have been exposed then. If Riddle wanted to encourage the Ministry to get rid of Albus's supporters--or rather, of Hogwarts' resident Order members whom Harry truested,who might have reined Potter in when Tom chose to send him the vision. That would explain the timing

Oooh, that's an interesting idea!

----Regarding Minerva--this is the woman who, when Albus confessed to treason and informed the Aurors that he did not intend to come quietly, offered to fight on his behalf, and was only dissuaded by Dumbledore's own insistance that she not.

True, I had forgotten about that.