Pottermore-
Apr. 14th, 2012 11:45 pmOkay - I confess; I joined Pottermore, out of sheer curiosity. I want to know if, by any strange chance, I will sort to Slytherin, and also what sort of wand I get. Still, some things struck me at once (I've spent about 20 minutes exploring the first chapter):
When describing Number 4, Privet Drive, Rowling said that she chose the number four because she disliked that number, finding it hard and unforgiving. I believe those were the exact words! Do you suppose that feeling is limited to the number four, or might it extend to other numbers?
On a more serious note, she based the look and floorplan of the house on that of a house she lived in herself - and got wierded out because, without discussing it with her, the filmmakers got the floorplan exactly right.
And - this is fascinating! - she had to argue with the publishers, who wanted to convert all the British measurements into metric ones. She also said that Wizards can do complex calculations magically. Can they, really? Then why did we never see them doing this?
Oh, dear. Maths.
But I'm very glad that she talked the publishers into keeping the old fashioned measurements. Can you imagine a metric Wizarding World? I can't.
When describing Number 4, Privet Drive, Rowling said that she chose the number four because she disliked that number, finding it hard and unforgiving. I believe those were the exact words! Do you suppose that feeling is limited to the number four, or might it extend to other numbers?
On a more serious note, she based the look and floorplan of the house on that of a house she lived in herself - and got wierded out because, without discussing it with her, the filmmakers got the floorplan exactly right.
And - this is fascinating! - she had to argue with the publishers, who wanted to convert all the British measurements into metric ones. She also said that Wizards can do complex calculations magically. Can they, really? Then why did we never see them doing this?
Oh, dear. Maths.
But I'm very glad that she talked the publishers into keeping the old fashioned measurements. Can you imagine a metric Wizarding World? I can't.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-17 01:08 pm (UTC)Does JKR seriously not think these things out?
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Date: 2012-04-18 02:33 am (UTC)But, but--those are just Muggles! Who cares what happens to them? It would be better for the world if some of them died out and their verminous population was reduced anyway.
Really, the whole WW is built on self-centeredness and narcissism.
That's hardly surprising, considering its creator seems to be a world-class narcissist. The wizarding attitude towards non-wizards reminds me of the way aristocrats felt about peasants in pre-revolution France. Considering that, it's not surprising magicals were killed by Muggles: It wasn't Muggle fear of their magic that got them killed, it was their own snotty attitude. I agree with what Mark Twain wrote in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court: When people condemn French peasants for the Reign of Terror, they forget that for every drop of aristocratic blood spilled then, a barrel of peasant blood had been spilled in the past by aristocrats. In the same way, people who want to condemn Muggles for killing wizards should remember the Muggle-baiting, Obliviation, and other abuse suffered by Muggles who were mostly powerless to fight back in the pre-technological age.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-18 02:53 am (UTC)I wonder if people on both sides said the same things about the Russian Revolution centuries later.
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Date: 2012-04-18 04:19 am (UTC)None of which means the peasants were saints. The gentry above were complaining about the fact that the village communes they had essentially kept enslaved for hundreds of years were taking over their estates by force, while allowing the nobility to escape with little more than their lives (if that). Even earlier you had Pugachev's rebellion, a bloody rampage that scarred the psyches of the nobility for generations.
Er... right, Harry Potter. I think if we learn anything from history it should be that as satisfying as revenge may be, it lowers you to the level of the original oppressors. Any thoughts on modern technology that might be able to restrain/imprison wizards if necessary without resorting to summary execution? For the weaker ones disarming them and keeping their wands secured should be sufficient. For the more powerful ones though I'm having trouble thinking of anything besides sedation, since they could likely use wand-less, nonverbal magic if their wands were confiscated. Have we seen anything that would let us put some upper limits on the extent of wand-less/nonverbal spells? As far as I can recall the canon there really weren't any besides the strength the wizard or witch in question.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-19 07:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-18 03:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-19 07:13 pm (UTC)Scrooge was a wizard, then! No wonder he lived such a solitary life... can't go mixing too much with those Muggles and his dratted Squib nephew (but making a living overcharging them is fine and dandy, so long as Secrecy isn't breached, I guess - maybe things were different in the 19th century). Though in his case a wizarding ghost and probably some other wizard(s) seem to have worked to change his mind about all that. Perhaps Dickens was a Muggle with a wizarding relative and had some opinions on these issues...