Author’s note: This is it, ladies and gentlemen. For those of you who’ve been wondering why this series, its characters, its creator, and her sycophant fans are so screwed up, here’s your answer. I fully expect the essay in the last half of this installment to revolutionize Harry Potter criticism. Enjoy!
Harry sits there at dawn, continuing to wallow in the trauma of losing his wand. No matter what anybody says, wands have to be phallic symbols. Nothing else can explain Harry’s trauma; he acts like Hermione’s broken his penis instead of a stick he uses to channel his magic. After some of Harry’s physical injuries over the series have been recapped, we get this histrionic passage:
“...[N]ever, until this moment, had he felt himself to be fatally weakened, vulnerable, and naked, as though the best part of his magical power had been torn from him. [I.e., as if a part of his body had been amputated.] He knew exactly what Hermione would say if he expressed any of this: The wand is only as good as the wizard. [Stupid girl. What does she understand about such a manly injury?] But she was wrong, his case was different. [Of course it is. He’s Harry Freakin’ Potter! Everything’s different, more intense, more important, when it happens to him.] She had not felt the wand spin like the needle of a compass and shoot golden flames at his enemy. [Come on. Tell me that’s not blatantly phallic.] He had lost the protection of the twin cores, and only now that it was gone did he realize how much he had been counting upon it.” [This is also phallic, since both urine and semen come out of the penis.]
The wand = penis equation works from a historical perspective, too. Wands were originally used in the ceremonies of the earliest religions, which all centered on fertility. In that context, a wand could have been a dildo, or at least a symbolic penis; for example, it could have been waved over seeds, plants, female animals, and/or women to “fertilize” them.
After reading Harry’s self-pitying angsting, I also think wands are crutches. Harry had powerful magic long before he ever had a wand and learned how to use it. At best, a wand just amplifies the magic one already has; more likely, it’s just a way to allow one to concentrate and direct one’s magic. In other words, there’s no reason a person should not be able to do magic with no wand at all, as long as s/he learns to direct hir magic in other ways. One of the many ways in which Hogwarts is deficient is in not requiring courses in wandless magic.
Harry stuffs his broken wand in the pouch he wears around his neck that contains all his other broken, useless items (shades of the Hoarder Harry we saw in chapter 2). He comes across the snitch Dumbledore left him and is tempted to throw it away. “Impenetrable, unhelpful, useless, like everything else Dumbledore had left behind--”
Come to think of it, those adjectives apply perfectly to Dumbledore himself. All he’s done throughout the series is lie, deny, minimize, cover up, and throw barriers in the way of getting rid of Voldemort permanently. His failure to even attempt to find a way to remove the Horcrux from Harry without killing him is unconscionable. Even people who dislike Harry have to admit he has a right to live out his life normally. No one should have to die because some lazy, self-important old shithead doesn’t want to be bothered to find a way for him to live.
Harry comes to this conclusion himself, even admitting it was sheer desperation for answers that sent Hermione and him to Godric’s Hollow. Just then, Hermione comes out of the tent with cups of tea, with tears running down her face and looking terrified her “friend” is going to curse her with her own wand. Harry is so much like James in other ways; is this a hint terri_testing is right, and James was a batterer?
She brings out the new copy of Rita Skeeter’s biography of Dumbledore that was lying in Bagshot’s house. It’s inscribed to Bathilda; interestingly, Skeeter’s handwriting sounds like Snape’s: They’re both described as “spiky.”
Harry feels “a surge of savage pleasure” as he realizes he can now get the dirt on Dumbledore, whether the old geezer would have wanted him to or not. Hermione breaks into his thoughts and asks if he’s still angry at her. Realizing she still looks tearful and terrified, Harry says he’s not and praises her rescue of him, admitting he’d be dead without her. Probably not, Harry. Most likely, Voldy would have wanted to exhibit and torture you before killing you.
They open the book and see the picture of Albus and Gellert laughing uproariously together “shortly after his mother’s death.” Even by modern standards, such behavior would be considered tasteless; in the Victorian Era, it was outrageous.
Apparently never having heard of indexes, Harry looks at the pages near the picture for more information on Grindelwald. He finds what he’s looking for in a chapter entitled, “Villainous Treachery” “The Greater Good.”
After winning a laundry list of prizes and honors that were obviously invented just for this passage to make Dumbledore look brilliant we’ve never heard of before and never will again, Albus was about to go on his Grand Tour with Doge when they received news Kendra had died, and Albus had to go home to care for his siblings.
There’s a bizarre remark from a former neighbor that Aberforth threw goat crap at the neighbors. This is something monkeys do. Unless a person were very young--like, preverbal young--or severely handicapped mentally, a human would not do this, no matter how much he hated his neighbors. Since Aberforth seems perfectly normal, even quite intelligent and insightful, when we meet him later, I’m inclined to believe Albus Confunded this “witness” in his continuing campaign to slander his brother. Albus must have felt very threatened by Aberforth to go to so much trouble to ruin his reputation, and thus his chances for success in the highly insular wizarding society. Aberforth obviously could not be allowed to compete with and possibly overshadow Albus.
Skeeter describes how she gave Veritaserum to Bathilda to get her remember a hundred years back to when she had her great-nephew, Gellert Grindelwald, visiting and striking up a “friendship” with Albus. Apparently Veritaserum isn’t just a truth potion; it’s also a temporary cure for magical dementia. The problem with this is that, once again, Rowling didn’t do her research. I found this on a website called, “Memory Loss Online”:
In most kinds of dementia autopsy reveals widespread degeneration in the cerebral cortex--such as the plaques and tangles which are the hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia are therefore sometimes classed as "cortical dementias." In other kinds of dementia, there is targeted damage to regions lying under the cortex, giving rise to the category known as "subcortical dementias." This terminology is somewhat misleading, because both classes of dementia can cause damage to both cortical and subcortical areas.
I then looked at an article published in Scientific American in 2009. Yes, I know that was after DH was published. Hear me out. This article reported that, the older the memory, the more the frontal lobes are involved in retaining and retrieving it. In other words, if Bathilda really had dementia, it would have been impossible to retrieve her memories using any means because the parts of the brain where those memories were stored were either damaged or no longer existed.
I don’t expect Rowling to be prescient and know about scientific discoveries before they’re made (although I’ve done that myself a few times). I do expect her to be logical: Five minutes of research would have shown that dementia causes brain damage. Therefore, just to be safe, she should not have made Bathilda senile because that might mean the part of her brain that stores memories could have been damaged by her illness. If Bagshot had been really old, that would have made her vulnerable enough to being tricked by Rita Skeeter. We’ve all heard stories about old people being taken advantage of by slick con artists.
There is one other possibility that might let JKR off the hook: In old people, malnutrition can mimic the symptoms of dementia. When they’re given proper nutrition, seemingly senile old people can quickly become mentally normal again. Given the atrocious state of Bagshot’s house, she might just have been malnourished. If Rita bought her a few meals, that could have restored Bathilda’s mind and thus her memory temporarily, and in her own scientific ignorance, Skeeter would have attributed the restoration of Bagshot’s faculties to the Veritaserum. Another possibility is that the potion itself has nutritive properties that temporarily healed Bagshot’s brain, as I sarcastically yet presciently suggested above.
Bathilda gave Rita loads of juicy gossip about the “friendship” between Albus and Gellert. She says Gellert was charming, not surprising given the psychopath’s unparalleled ability to be whoever he needs to be at any moment. Serial killer Ted Bundy was extremely charming, too. Bathilda introduced her grand-nephew to Albus since she knew her young neighbor was missing boys his own age. She also showed Skeeter a letter Dumbledore wrote Grindelwald late at night.
Bagshot is quoted as saying,“Yes, even after they’d spent all day in discussion--both such brilliant young boys, they got on like a cauldron on fire--I’d sometimes hear an owl tapping at Gellert’s bedroom window, delivering a letter from Albus! An idea would have struck him, and he had to let Gellert know immediately!”
Both the reference to an owl tapping on the window late at night and Albus’s frustration at his blighted hopes reminded me of Taylor Swift’s first big hit, “Our Song.” She wrote it when she was sixteen about a high school boyfriend. She’s said it perfectly captures what it was like to be that age:
I was walking up the front porch steps
After everything that day
Had gone all wrong,
And been trampled on,
And lost and thrown away.
I got to the hallway
Well on my way
To my loving bed.
I almost didn’t notice
All the roses
And the note that said,
“Our song is the slamming screen door,
Sneaking out late, tapping on your window
When we’re on the phone,
And you talk real slow
‘Cause it’s late, and your mama don’t know.
“‘Our song is the way you laugh,
The first date, man,
I didn’t kiss [him], and I should have.
And when I got home, before I said, ‘Amen,’
Asking God if he could play it again.’”
Oh, sure, Albus and Gellert were “just good friends.” *snort* If you believe that, I have a herd of Crumple-Horned Snorkacks to sell you.
One of the two highlights of this chapter is the letter from Albus showing how evil he was when he was too young to have learned to cover it up effectively. Of course, it’s much harder for a young man to come across as a benign, all-knowing dictator mentor than it is an old one.
Gellert--
Your point about Wizard dominance being FOR THE MUGGLES’ OWN GOOD--this, I think, is the crucial point. Yes, we have been given power and yes, that power gives us the right to rule, but it also gives us responsibilities over the ruled. We must stress this point, it will be the foundation stone upon which we build. Where we are opposed, as we surely will be, this must be the basis of all our counterarguments. We seize control FOR THE GREATER GOOD. And from this it follows that where we meet resistance, we must use only the force that is necessary and no more. (This was your mistake at Durmstrang! But I do not complain, because if you had not been expelled, we would never have met.)
Albus (Emphasis in original)
LIke the Godric’s Hollow Voldie-vision, I’ll take this lie by lie.
Wizard dominance for the muggles’ own good: I wonder if Gellert really believed this, or if he was trying to convince his new boyfriend? Given Gellert’s proven capacity for depraved, predatory violence, it’s a safe bet he didn’t give a damn about anybody’s good but his own. However, he apparently was clever enough to figure out that Albus liked to lie to himself that he was doing good even when he was doing bad (or Albus liked to give the appearance of thinking that way so he would appear benevolent, and thus con the rubes more effectively), so Gellert would have altered his sales pitch accordingly.
Every time I see the phrase “for somebody’s own good,” I remember a book in which a character said, “When you do something for somebody’s own good, it really means not leaving them alone.” Albus never did learn how to mind his own business.
Power and the right to rule: This is typical nineteenth century “white man’s burden” BS, although in this case it could be better described as “the magical man’s burden.” It’s also the rationalization those with power have always used to justify their exploitation of the less powerful.
Responsibilities over the ruled: This refers to Albus’s penchant for believing (or appearing to believe) he was helping people when he was really exploiting and abusing them.
Stressing this point: Whom are they trying to convince of this, other magicals, themselves, or both? Either way, it’s another way of saying “for your own good.”
Using only the force necessary: In other words, “we’re doing it for the betterment of those stupid muggles, but we can’t expect such inferior beings to appreciate our good intentions, so we’ll have to force them to submit. Eventually, they’ll see they’re better off with us in charge.” It’s “the magical man’s burden” again.
Gellert’s mistake, not complaining: I love the gentle way Albus refers to what must have been horrific crimes on his boyfriend’s part. Given the blasè attitude of the British wizarding world in the present towards bullying and abuse, the viewpoint of a hundred years ago may have been even more callous.
Even better is Albus’s good-humored reference to not complaining because they wouldn’t have met otherwise. That could not be any more self-centered. Gellert committed what must have been heinous crimes against others, but that’s okay with Albus because it sent his lover into his arms. He sounds like those idiot women who marry convicted murderers on death row: “Sure, you murdered at least three dozen young women (Ted Bundy), or shotgunned your parents from behind while they were sitting on the couch watching TV (the Menendez brothers). That’s okay; we never would have met otherwise. I love you anyway.” He needs to have his name officially changed to Asshole Albus.
Rita Skeeter points out this letter blows to hell the belief Dumbledore was a noble champion of equality and human rights. To the argument that he never carried out his ideas, she adds it wasn’t “seeing the error of his ways” that stopped him; it was the death of his sister and its aftermath. Like Voldemort, we’re supposed to regard Skeeter as a depraved liar, but also like Voldy, when she’s right, she’s right. I have no doubt that if Gellert had not taken off for good after Ariana’s death, he would have persuaded Albus to go ahead with their plans together.
For the last several months, I’ve had kicking around in my head the idea for a fan fiction called Worst Case Scenario: Realizing he’s about to lose Vold War II, Voldemort uses a black market Time-Turner he’s kept on hand for emergencies. (Hey, he’s a Slytherin. They like to plan for every eventuality.) He goes back in time to 1898 to recruit Albus and Gellert to join with him in taking over the world in that era. Snape figures out what Voldy’s done and goes after him to stop him (with some help from the portrait of Headmaster Black). But he’ll need some extraordinary and unexpected allies to stop this ultimate Golden Trio.
Anyway, the biography recounts the story of Aberforth breaking Albus’s nose at Ariana’s funeral and raises a lot of questions, including these: Why did Albus blame Gellert for his sister’s death? Why did Albus fool around about taking down his ex during World War II? Was Ariana the first person to die “for the greater good”?
The laundry list of questions makes the book sound as if it were written by Glenn Beck, who’ll make outrageous accusations disguised as questions, then excuse himself by saying, “I’m not suggesting anything. I’m just asking questions.” (This was brilliantly and hilariously parodied on the South Park episode, “Dances with Smurfs.”)
This makes me wonder whether Rowling has ever read any books in the “trashy celebrity bio” genre she seems to be parodying. I have, and she’s doing it wrong.
Kitty Kelley is probably the queen of this kind of book. Despite her habit of profiling only well-known people who fascinate the public, her biographies are extremely well-researched and typically have at least 30 pages of references at the end, including dozens of books, hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles, and hundreds of exclusive interviews she conducted personally. She doesn’t ask questions; she makes statements backed up by evidence. The fact those statements are often shocking doesn’t make them any less well-supported. (E.g., Ronald Reagan raping a starlet in the 1950s, or George W. Bush being drunk or on drugs most of the time while in college)
Back to the story:
When the Hs finish reading this Albus-annihilating portion of the book (of course, Hermione finishes first), they look at each other. Immediately, Hermione starts trying to whitewash (or should I say, Albuswash) the ugly truth about this authority figure. She admits it’s “not very nice reading,” but tries to blow off the accusations as Skeeter slander. She admits Dumbledore’s “greater good” phrase was exploited by Grindelwald, but insists they just knew each other for a few months when they were young, and Dumbledore “got over” his fling with the dark side and spent the rest of his life promoting “muggle” and “muggleborn” rights.
To Harry’s tremendous credit, he doesn’t let her get away with her rationalizations. He reminds her of the damning letter, and that their idol was planning to use evil means to take over the world at the same age as they are while risking their lives to fight evil.
Hermione tries to shut him up, but her plan backfires horribly:
“Harry, I’m sorry, but I think the real reason you’re so angry is that Dumbledore never told you any of this himself.”
“Maybe I am!” Harry bellowed...”Look what he asked from me, Hermione! Risk your life, Harry! And again! And again! And don’t expect me to explain everything, just trust me blindly, trust that I know what I’m doing, trust me even though I don’t trust you! Never the whole truth! Never!”...
“He loved you,” Hermione whispered. “I know he loved you.”...
“I don’t know who he loved, Hermione, but it was never me. This isn’t love, the mess he’s left me in. He shared a damn sight more of what he was really thinking with Gellert Grindelwald than he ever shared with me.”...
[H]e hated himself for wishing that what she said was true: that Dumbledore had really cared.
This is the other time in DH that I wanted to stand up and cheer for Harry. Thank God! I thought. He’s finally growing up. He’s finally thinking for himself. He’s finally looking at reality, instead of just mindlessly swallowing the lies he’s been told.
The major reason the Harry Potter books are so frustrating and infuriating is because the characters never grow up. They remain stuck in the early, childish stages of spiritual development. That’s bad enough, but what makes it inexcusably sick is that this immaturity is presented as meritorious. The reader is also supposed to want to be stalled in a perpetual spiritual childhood.
The idea that spirituality has stages was originated by James Fowler in his book Stages of Faith; it was further developed by Kenneth Stokes in Faith Is a Verb. My descriptions are adapted from Many Roads, One Journey, by Charlotte Davis Kasl; the quotations that follow come from her book. There are six levels of spiritual development, corresponding to chronological ages.
The Innocent, age 1 to 6: Children believe what they’re told with few or no questions. Their goal is to be just like their parents. Authority rests entirely outside the child. This is called an external locus of control.
The Literalist, age 6 to 11 or 12: This stage “is characterized by concrete, literal thinking.” (29) Children begin to look outside the family for other authority figures, but authority is still almost entirely external. People in this stage believe there is only one way to do or be, and they belong to that righteous group. When people say, “[Authority figure] said it. I believe it. That settles it,” they are expressing a belief from this stage of development.
This is the stage many JKR fans are stuck in. When Rowling says, “James reformed and became a good guy,” or “Dumbledore is the epitome of goodness, but Snape is a deeply horrible person,” they just accept those assertions. It doesn’t occur to them to look at the textual evidence and make their own decisions based on that evidence. If they do accidentally confront evidence that contradicts Rowling’s words, these fans just ignore it. It must be a mistake. What matters is what the author intended to write, or says she wrote, not what is really on the page. The idea does not even enter their heads that JKR could be a deeply conflicted person who is not aware herself of the subliminal messages or contradictions in her writing. As the creator of this universe, Rowling is the ultimate authority--the Goddess, if you will--and what she says about her creation goes. Period.
The Loyalist, ages 11 or 12 to 15 or 16: In this stage, authority is still largely external, but peers become the most important authority figures. Loyalty to the peer group is paramount. Betraying one’s peers is the ultimate sin deserving of the ultimate punishment--such as permanent scarification.
This is clearly the stage Rowling herself is stuck in. That’s why she regards Marietta as “a traitor” for telling on her peers, even under duress, but she doesn’t consider it a betrayal for Marietta to put her mother at risk by keeping silent. When you’re a teenager, your peer group is often more important than your own family.
Because Rowling is on a slightly higher level of development than many of her fans, she appears mature to them, so they have no problem seeing her as an authority figure. To them, people who criticize her are renegades who just need to shut up and do as they’re told--just as Hermione told Harry to shut up and do as Dumbledore ordered.
In stages 1 to 3, people are convinced their beliefs and group are unassailably right, and if you aren’t like them, you’re automatically wrong. Their rightness and your wrongness gives them the right to remake you in their own image.
The Critic, ages 16 to 20s and 30s: This is when people begin questioning the beliefs they were raised with and trying to find their own way to live and think. It requires courage and willingness twice over: to look honestly at what you’ve been taught and decide if it’s right for you, and (if necessary) to break free from those learned beliefs and find your own way, even if it’s difficult and painful. Internal authority begins to be more important than external authority.
Many people never reach this stage. They stay stuck in stages 1 to 3 and never learn to think for themselves.
The Seer, usually not before age 30: This is an integration of all the earlier stages; because of that, people may shift back and forth between stages 3, 4, and 5 depending on life circumstances such as feelings of stress or security. While certain aspects of life, such as relationships, tastes, and career may change, the person has a deep inner core of beliefs that do not change and that guide hir life.
The critical HP fans are in stages 4 and 5. (I have yet to meet one who’s a stage 6.) Their higher levels of development allow them to see how immature the text, its creator, and the uncritical fans are.
Universalizing Faith, usually not reached at all: This happens when a person becomes “one with the spirit. Values, beliefs, and the actions become one.” (33) “They are at one with their spirit, their love, and their purpose. They live by faith and without fear.” (52)
I think this is the kind of character Rowling was trying to create when she wrote Albus Dumbledore--and to someone at her level of development, he probably does appear to be this good and this evolved. The problem is, you can’t realistically write someone who is at a significantly higher level of development than you are yourself. It’s like a normal ten-year-old trying to teach a post-graduate course on theoretical physics. The gap between what you are and what you’re trying to do is too great to be bridged.
People in stages 4 to 6 are able to look at evidence, evaluate it, and make their own decisions based on that evidence. In fact, they have to do this, as their higher stages of development won’t allow them to mindlessly submit to authority figures any longer. In these stages, authority rests within the individual (an internal locus of control). While people may seek information from experts when necessary (for example, regarding medical treatment), the ultimate decision is always made by the individual hirself.
People who are two or more stages apart usually do not get along well because the developmental differences between them are too great for the comfort of either person. In fact, people in the first three levels cannot even conceive that stages of development higher than their own exist. This is why Rowling gets so angry about fans who refuse to accept her pronouncements about the series. She literally cannot imagine that someone might look at the characters and situations differently than she does. She created it, so that makes her the ultimate authority, dammit. How dare anyone question what she says about her own creation! This is also the way her dittohead fans think, which explains their contempt for critics who claim to see things in the books Rowling herself does not, that she denies are even there.
If we look at the HP books, it is painfully clear that the major characters stay stuck in stages 1 to 3. All of them act because Voldemort or Dumbledore says so, or to spite those characters, which is the same thing but in reverse. As Nancy Friday put it in her mistresspiece, My Mother/My Self:
“Rebellion should not be mistaken for separation. As long as the effort to break away is seen not as a blow for ourselves but as a reaction to the parent, it is still a symbiotic proceeding. Rebellion becomes separation when the goal is self-fulfillment, not mere frustration of something the parent wants us to do....
“...The rebellious person who must always put a minus sign where she is asked to put a plus is merely reacting to somebody else. She is not free to go her own way, to choose not to argue. She is ever tied, ever waiting. Give me something to say No to.” (326-7)
Harry’s being devastated by the revelations about Dumbledore is one of only two places in this book when we see a character striving to break out of the lower stages into stage 4. That is why Harry is in such pain here. Kasl writes:
“This phase includes observation, experimentation, and growing inner awareness, which often lead to disillusionment, struggle, doubt, and difficult questions that go against the established order. It can be a shattering time, as people discover that much of what they have been taught wasn’t really in their best interest. As one loyal Catholic woman wrote, ‘I realized I’d been lied to all my life. I did everything they said I should, and I ended up miserable and suicidal.’
“This stage of questioning may start in late adolescence, and can be repeated throughout one’s lifetime as new situations arise.” (31)
Rowling’s own spiritual retardation explains most of the faults of this series that make fans in stages 4 to 6 crazy. Harry never grows up because that would require him to develop a spiritual maturity his creator does not possess herself and therefore cannot write. He is passive and waits for “Dumbledore to explain it all” because that’s what children do. They’re not supposed to think for themselves, make their own plans, or come up with their own solutions to complicated problems. That’s what adults are for.
Until a child’s age is in double digits, parents are like gods. What they say, goes, no matter how bizarre, outrageous, or ridiculous. Children under age 10 are usually not capable of critically examining and evaluating the information their parents give them because their brains are not developed enough. Since Harry has no parents, and the Dursleys don’t care about him, Dumbledore assumes the parental role. Because of the abuse and neglect Harry has suffered, coupled with the Dursleys’ own severe personality deficiencies, he begins the series underdeveloped psychologically and spiritually. Dumbledore keeps him in that retarded state because allowing Harry to grow up and become independent would enable him to question Dumbledore and (horrors!) object to the plans already made for him.
This spiritual retardation also explains why Harry spends all of DH obsessing over Dumbledore: Did he really love me? What did he want me to do? Why didn’t he give me more information? What would he think about this situation (whatever it is)? Harry is only physically a young man on the verge of maturity. Inside, he’s still a terrified, neglected little boy waiting for his all-seeing, all-knowing Big Daddy Dumbledore to tell him what to think and do. If the reader quits seeing Harry’s 17-year-old body and sees his 8-year-old soul, this all makes sense.
Rowling’s spiritual underdevelopment also explains the weird veering between the cartoonish and dark moods that are found in the later books. She could write the first three books with a single mood because she was writing for an audience on a lower spiritual level than she is, so she was able to maintain a consistent, “childish fun” tone in them. Once she tried to make the books “grow up” by getting edgier and darker, she got into the adolescent stage of the series, and the wild swings between childishness and maturity characteristic of her own adolescent developmental stage seeped into her writing.
Rowling’s being stalled in an adolescent spiritual stage explains equally well the ludicrous situation that makes Snape fans crazy: his obsession with the dead girl he loved as a teenager. In the real world, a person pushing forty who is still hung up on their teenage (non)love really would be the “freak” Petunia calls all magical people. But to the spiritually adolescent JKR, it makes perfect sense that an intelligent, accomplished grown man with two demanding, dangerous jobs would still be pining for the girl who rejected him decades ago when he was a teenager. Everything really important happens when you’re a teenager--doesn’t it?
Well, sure. That’s why everybody in the Potterverse has to not just marry somebody they knew in school, but do it as quickly as possible after graduation. If they can start popping out babies right away, that’s even better. And nobody ever grows up or grows apart, so all the marriages stay forever suspended in amber, in the same spiritual and emotional state the partners were in when they married, however long ago that was.
Regarding Harry and Hermione in this chapter, because she is still stuck in stages 2 and 3, Hermione feels threatened when Harry breaks through into stage 4 and attempts to drag him back to her level. First she tries to dismiss the allegations against Dumbledore as being from an unreliable source (i.e., “My authority figure is better than your authority figure.”). When that doesn’t work, she briefly admits to the “greater good” angle, then says it doesn’t matter because their idol changed for the better (so he’s still a trustworthy authority figure who should be obeyed). When Harry’s not persuaded by that argument either, she attempts to slap him down by acting as if his legitimate questions are just the ranting of a petulant child whose feelings are hurt because he was kept in the dark (i.e., she tries to convince him he’s even more immature than she is, thus restoring her superior know-it-all status).
What Hermione doesn’t get is that, even though she is technically correct, Harry still has every right to be angry. Because Hermione is in stages 2 and 3, she has no problem with their authority figure keeping information from them. Like the Light Brigade, her attitude is “Theirs not to reason why,/Theirs but to do and die.” For all her veneer of “take-charge grown-up,” Hermione is really a little girl following the orders of Big Daddy Dumbledore. The only reason she appears mature at all is because Ron and Harry are even more immature than she is. They’re so regressed they can’t even make independent plans; they have to wait for somebody else to tell them what to do. That’s why the Horcrux hunt was destined for failure: Its success depended on Harry’s ability to act and think independently and logically, but he can’t--because he was actively prevented from learning those skills.
In Hermione’s defense, her behavior is understandable. Harry is in pain, and watching that is profoundly uncomfortable for her. Besides, their entire relationship has been based on her telling him what to do. She can’t be blamed for objecting when he starts thinking for himself.
It’s not a coincidence that the other time in which we see a character breaking through to stage 4 is in “The Prince’s Tale,” when Snape realizes he’s also been lied to, jerked around, and set up by Dumbledore. He’s wasted his life protecting Harry for nothing, been insulted, called untrustworthy, and ordered to commit murder. Tough shit if his soul is damaged in the process. Harry’s words above could just as easily have been spoken by him.
This is an excellent chapter, but in a way, it really pisses me off because it stands in such stark contrast to most of DH. Why couldn’t the whole damned book have been this good? Why couldn’t Harry have truly grown up? I know I already answered that last question, but because of my frustration with this series, I can’t help asking it anyway.
DH trades our literary birthright of an excellent conclusion to a good series for the mess of pottage that is this dull doorstop thrown together to meet a deadline and make money.
no subject
Date: 2013-05-07 12:59 am (UTC)And prisoners, sometimes, because they have so few ways to express rage, frustration, etc. Is that what the Dumbledore house was like?
There's another possibility for Bathilda: she didn't have dementia. She might have been the victim of a smear campaign to discredit her - oh, she's so old, her memory must be going, what strange things she says... We saw Rita herself try this tactic briefly to discredit Dumbledore. Maybe in Bathilda's case, it was a longer, more successful campaign. Possibly assisted by someone occasionally Confuding her to make her say strange things, or temporarily forget information anyone with half their marbles would know.
We know Lily left a letter lying about that mentions the strange stories Bathilda was telling her about Dumbledore's youth back in 1981. Considering that the Potters were in hiding (though not yet under Fidelius) at the time, there's a very short list of people who both could have seen that letter, and who would have wanted Bathilda to stop talking about Albus Dumbledore.
Harry's breakthrough here is one of the most frustrating parts of the whole book! Finally, I thought, he was going to move beyond being Dumbledore's Man and start thinking about what was really the right thing to do (vs. the comparatively easy thing, following DD's orders). He was going to stop listening to his doubts (expressed by Hermione) that he just couldn't understand anything for himself and needed Dumbledore to tell him what to do. But no, the revelation gets thoroughly squashed - all we need is Train Station Purgatory Dumbledore to tell us he's rilly sorry but it actually turned out for the best, and everything's good again, and has turned out according to DD's plan.
I wonder if JKR subconsciously panicked at Harry's outburst here? He would have taken her carefully-plotted denouement right off the rails if he had kept going in this vein. And if this whole thing is her subconscious grappling with the idea of a God who would let her mother die... well, to say following Harry's train of thought could be world-shattering would be an understatement. Just too much to deal with, must cram this lid back on this can of worms...
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Date: 2013-05-07 11:43 am (UTC)And prisoners, sometimes, because they have so few ways to express rage, frustration, etc. Is that what the Dumbledore house was like?
The twins sent dung to Percy in the mail, which is the sort of behaviour associated with hate crimes, but is treated as a joke, so perhaps it's just the WW again. But I tend to agree with you - Aberforth's beloved sister has been attacked, his dad's in prison, his mum seems a very controlling person, he's ignored in favour of his brilliant brother; Aberforth's behaviour at this time may well be disturbed - the neighbour may have been making disparaging remarks about the family which set him off - or could it have been accidental magic?
She admits Dumbledore’s “greater good” phrase was exploited by Grindelwald, but insists they just knew each other for a few months when they were young, and Dumbledore “got over” his fling with the dark side and spent the rest of his life promoting “muggle” and “muggleborn” rights.
I'm not sure about 'exploited'; Dumbledore seems to be as much a mover in their enterprises as Grindelwald. However, Hermione is right in that it is possible for people to get over teenage involvement in idiot politics and work to set things right. The problem I have with Dumbledore is his setting himself up as the pillar of all wisdom, and the fact that he still believed in his right to work for the 'greater good' albeit from a different perspective.
Agree about the let down of Kings Cross.
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Date: 2013-05-07 01:13 am (UTC)Myself, I can't help wondering about the alternate universe where all of the Harry Potter books lived up to the promise of HP and the sorcerer's stone
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Date: 2013-05-07 04:55 pm (UTC)Yes, you’ll find this emotional attachment to wands in a lot of fanfics too. I think that it’s because a wand is supposed to be very personal. Each witch and wizard is given a wand that responds specifically to them and which contains a specific combination of ingredients that is supposed to correlate with a witch or wizard’s own personal needs.
/Harry had powerful magic long before he ever had a wand and learned how to use it. At best, a wand just amplifies the magic one already has; more likely, it’s just a way to allow one to concentrate and direct one’s magic./
Yes, I thought that the main purpose of a wand to focus magic, not generate magic itself. After all, if wizards relied solely on their wands for magic, then any Muggle could cast a spell if they got their hands on a wand. And yet not many wizards seem to know wandless magic and it’s implied that a witch or wizard without their wand is automatically helpless. If that’s the case, then all Muggles need to do to defeat wizards is to take their wands away.
/His failure to even attempt to find a way to remove the Horcrux from Harry without killing him is unconscionable./
Yes, that’s the main problem. If Dumbledore and the Order *did* try to find other ways to defeat Voldemort that didn’t involve Harry’s sacrifice, but were unable to find any, that would be one thing. But to not even try and assume that the death of a child is the only way to win?
/Just then, Hermione comes out of the tent with cups of tea, with tears running down her face and looking terrified her “friend” is going to curse her with her own wand./
So, Hermione will snarl at Ron all day long, but cower in fear when Harry gets mad. Is she projecting herself onto Harry and assuming that just because *she’s* quick to hex people who anger her (Ron, Marietta, etc.), Harry will do the same to her?
/Oh, sure, Albus and Gellert were “just good friends.” *snort*/
I’m surprised that Rita Skeeter didn’t suggest that. Considering that she wrote about the “unnatural relationship” that Dumbledore had with Harry, she could have also (not so subtly) implied that Gellert and Albus were a couple. It’s not like JKR hasn’t written something like this before. Dudley taunted Harry about his “boyfriend” Cedric in OotP, so why couldn’t Rita have alluded to a romantic relationship between Dumbledore and Grindelwald here?
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Date: 2013-05-07 05:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-11 08:43 pm (UTC)To be fair, Harry has shown an inclination towards berserk rages, smirking at bullying, and a distinct lack of empathy for even his supposed best friends over the last three years. I'd say she has exactly the right idea.
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Date: 2013-05-07 05:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-08 01:58 am (UTC)If her memory loss and odd behavior is due to a spell or potion suppressing/altering them rather than progressive brain damage, Rita dosing her with Veritaserum might have broken through to her memories much like Voldemort could rip through the memory charm on Bertha Jorkins, with Rita none the wiser as to what she had actually done. Or, if she's actually fine and it's only because of a stealthy smear campaign that everyone thinks she's "Batty," Rita might have figured out right away that Bathilda was still sharp but wanted to keep it quiet for some reason. Maybe she got something from Bathilda on another person for her next book and doesn't want anyone scooping her. And so Obliviated Bathilda after the interview. Lockhart can't have been the only one to try this interview tactic over the years... (Which makes her inscription in the book a particularly nasty taunt. I made you talk, I made you forget, and I can come back any time I want to do it again and you can't stop me, and not only that, I can as good as trumpet to the world what I did and no one cares because they think "batty" old women aren't worth a knut anyway.)
Also, in fairness.... Albus certainly has reason not to want her gossiping about his family life and youthful flings, and he's been known to impugn a person's faculties and/or talents before to discredit anything they might say in advance (eg, joking about Aberforth's supposed illiteracy and fondness for goats). On the other hand, who knows how many other people might have wanted to shut Bathilda up for some reason? She lives in a partially wizarding village and might have seen any number of other family secrets over the years. Maybe Griselda Marchbanks has some nasty skeletons in her closet too. Or maybe Bathilda knows that someone who died in the first war was actually kind of an ass, and that person's family doesn't want her gossip tarnishing their memory. (Maybe Edgar Bones was a hallucinogenic potions addict, idk.)
Maybe she knew something about one of those Death Eaters who talked their way out of Azkaban, and Crouch didn't want her jeopardizing one of his deals. Bertha Jorkins's mind was never quite the same after she inadvertently threatened something he wanted secret; maybe his power-tripping ways mean it wasn't just a one-time thing for his greatest secret alone. Maybe Rita giving Bathilda Veritaserum was an even closer parallel to Voldemort Legilimensing Bertha than my initial speculation!
Or maybe the people she was talking not-entirely-complimentarily about were the Potters. Some people had a vested interest in making sure they got remembered as war martyrs.
Not that we can prove any of this. But this is a series where when people start acting oddly, there tends to be a magical reason for it, not the natural explanation you might expect. And JKR does pull that "see it once, see it again" trick so often that given Rita's attempt to smear Dumbledore as an "old coot," Bertha's memory problems being due to someone wanting to shut her up with magic, Lockhart's interview-and-Obliviate technique, etc., I'm suspicious .
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Date: 2013-05-08 06:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-09 02:09 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-08 03:39 pm (UTC)I think that Dumbledore must have primarily gained his reputation as a champion of Muggles and Muggleborns by fighting against Grindelwald and Voldemort, who both attracted followers by spouting a pureblood agenda. But I'm not sure that the desire to stop a psychotic megalomaniac from taking over the world necessarily translates into caring about the groups of people who are being oppressed or killed. Apart from his opposition to the two dark wizards, what did Dumbledore ever really do to promote Muggle and Muggleborn rights?
----In the real world, a person pushing forty who is still hung up on their teenage (non)love really would be the “freak” Petunia calls all magical people.
Under normal circumstances, absolutely. But Lily was murdered. And Severus blamed himself for her death. I think his undying love was due more to unhealed trauma than to some kind of creepy obsession.
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Date: 2013-05-09 02:15 am (UTC)And most crucially, her murderer was still at large. Families and best friends of murder victims often do find it harder to move on while there's still a huge loose end like that. Plus Snape was in the position of being able to help stop her killer, something that would probably keep her more in his thoughts than otherwise.
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Date: 2013-05-08 10:37 pm (UTC)Otherwise, this is a thought-provoking post for two reasons. First, a fanfic writer called Rebecca Webb said, several years ago, that Snapes, and Snape fans, were at a higher level on Kohlberg's stage of moral development than non - Snape fans. She put Snapes at 4 on the scale and Marauders at 2 or 3. Her idea was that Snape ultimately did what was objectively right, even at great cost to himself, while the Marauders basically did what seemed good to them. It's an interesting idea, but I'm not entirely sure I agree with it. I wouldn't really want to make any judgements on Rowling or on fans I've never met. We can safely judge *statements* and *actions*, but not the people, if you see what I mean?
But, as to DH reflecting Rowling's concept of spirituality, she herself has said something very similar. She said that the books reflect her struggle to go on believing in God. If she identifies with Harry, and sees God as being somewhat like Dumbledore, that's quite a chilling picture. Harry, in the end, is someone who sees all the lies and cruelty of his "god", but blindly obeys, anyway - and is rewarded for that obedience, and encouraged to lack empathy. Brrr! But I, personally, find that comparison (or allegory) very flawed. Dumbledore is neither loving nor omnipotent. He is not God - not even in the Potterverse. And he's a pretty poor analogue for the God I believe in. I also find Harry's retreat from questioning, his passivity, and his obedience, very problematic. This is a boy who's been trained to be a suicide bomber, and kids who read the books are encouraged to identify with him and his mission. That's just really disturbing to me.
If, though, you look at the books as asking questions, rather than giving answers, they become much more tolerable. I can empathize with Rowling's statement above. I really can. I wish I could feel that her story was meant to raise questions, rather than to reward blind obedience.
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Date: 2013-05-15 04:56 pm (UTC)First issue: you seem undecided on Albus's true character as revealed by his letter--is he as much a psychopath as Gellert, just with (already) a better sense of how to present himself to others to win long-term support and approbation, or is he self-deluded that he truly is good and wise? Does he actually believe that he's helping others when he's really abusing and exploiting them, or does he just appear to believe that?
I've only known personally one charming, handsome sociopath (a friend's abuser, the model for James in 'Liberacorpus'), but I've known a number of alcoholics and other people who have let themselves sometimes do terrible things while thinking of themselves as fundamentally good, decent people. The trick is, either the things are not really so bad, or the people to whom they're done really deserve it, or there are extenuating circumstances....
One of the criticisms of 'Liberacorpus' was that this reader saw James as the founding member of the James Potter fan club, and that he wouldn't do anything that he had to be aware was abusive. Anything he could pass off as a joke, or as discipline that Lily "deserved", yes, but not anything that could make him think badly of himself.
That's how I see Albus, that he was sincere in needing to think well of himself. Take over the world with his boyfriend? Sure, but only because he knows best how it should be run!
Then, his misjudgment of Gellert having proved he was unfit for ultimate power, he demonstrated to himself that he'd abjured ulitmate power by declining the post of Minister for Magic--while scooping up Head of Hogwarts, Chief Warlock of the Wizengamot, head of a clandestine secret society utterly devoted to him and putting his orders before the legitimate government's, etc.
And I think his reaction to the Harrycrux shows the difference between the charming psychopath and the (self-deluded) benevolent and wise mentor-behind-the-scenes. Barty Crouch Sr.'s persona is the ruthless war leader who will do ANYTHING to defeat Voldemort; Albus's is of someone who's too noble to do certain things, even if they might seem necessary. He disapproves of the Dementors and Unforgiveables, for example, even though he doesn't seize the reins of power (as, we're told, he could) to stop their deployment.
Barty, confronted with a Horcrux in the shape of a toddler, could kill the baby and justify it (to himself at least) as necessary for the final destruction of Voldemort. (Whether he could get away with doing so publicly might be a separate issue.)
But someone's who's too noble to use evil, even to fight evil, can't do that.
Someone who just wants to be thought of as "too noble to do certain things" COULD do it, as long as he covered it up adequately. And surely it would be easy enough to murder baby Harry and either cover it up or make it look like a death eater had gotten him? Easier than coming up with an elaborate scheme to cause Harry to be reared in a way to volunteer to suicide to take out Voldemort, when he came of age legally to do so.
The only reason I can see for Albus to raise Harry to commit suicide rather than killing him outright is that Albus really, truly, had managed to convince himself that that was more merciful and morally acceptable. To a mind sufficiently elevated to appreciate fine moral distinctions, of course. The boy would be dying voluntarily to destroy his greatest foe, and who could argue a young man's right so to avenge his family? And if Albus had to tweak the boy's upbringing to make CERTAIN the boy would ulitimately make the right decision, well, the important thing is that the right decision be made, and perfectly voluntarily, too!
So I have to see Albus as needing to satisfy himself as to his own fundeamental benevolence and wisdom, rather than a conscienceless psychopath who's adopted a public persona.
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Date: 2013-05-17 02:24 pm (UTC)Yes, I agree. Your thoughts here about Albus remind me a lot of previous discussion (http://deathtocapslock.livejournal.com/242403.html) about Hermione. They really are very similar characters, I think.
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Date: 2013-05-17 04:39 pm (UTC)This leads me to imagine a scenario where the Aurors had reached Godric's Hollow first. They would have observed that James and Lily were both dead and that Harry had a head wound that was filled with dark magic. Given his injury, Harry would have been rushed to St. Mungo's, whereupon somebody probably would have eventually figured out that Harry was now carrying around a piece of Voldemort's soul. Assuming that Harry had to die in order to eliminate the horcrux, it's easy to imagine officials like Barty Crouch agreeing that Harry needed to be euthanized and simply reporting to the public that the baby had succumbed to his injuries. And, in this scenario they wouldn't have had to be so concerned about public backlash, since it's unlikely that they would have ever pronounced Harry to be the one to defeat Voldemort. The boy would have just been remembered as yet another victim of the war.
Maybe this is a reason why Albus kept Harry away from the WW and why he so quickly proclaimed Harry to be the savior.
----The only reason I can see for Albus to raise Harry to commit suicide rather than killing him outright is that Albus really, truly, had managed to convince himself that that was more merciful and morally acceptable.
I'm wondering if Albus's interpretation of the prophecy was a factor in his decision. How seriously did he take "either must die at the hand of the other"?
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Date: 2013-05-17 07:35 pm (UTC)Anyway - I do agree with you that Albus wants to be seen as great and good. He also, I think, wants people to obey and worship him, in spite of his moments of (false?) humility. Are these traits incompatible with a sociopath?
I completely agree with Oneandthetruth that Albus's failure to even consider whether it's possible to to destroy a horcrux without also destroying its vessel is chilling, indeed.
One of the things I wonder, when I think about these books, is this: did Rowling ever consider broadening her pov? What made her attempt to stick so closely to the way Harry perceived the story? Especially when the story turned out not to be a true Bildungsroman? I don't know how it would have seemed to the young teens and tweens who were the primary audience, but I found Harry's limited pov positively suffocating in the last two books.
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Date: 2013-05-31 06:16 pm (UTC)Thank you. That's an interesting compliment. I guess it means you were intellectually stimulated by it.
First issue: you seem undecided on Albus's true character as revealed by his letter--is he as much a psychopath as Gellert, just with (already) a better sense of how to present himself to others to win long-term support and approbation, or is he self-deluded that he truly is good and wise? Does he actually believe that he's helping others when he's really abusing and exploiting them, or does he just appear to believe that?
I can see why you might be confused, but keep in mind this is not a stand-alone essay. It should be read in the context of not just this sporking, but also of everything else I've written about AD, particularly "Chaos a Hundred Times," which is my longest explication of his character. There is no doubt in my mind: He is evil to the core, a predatory narcissistic psychopath, who happens to be clever enough to pretend benevolence to more effectively con people into going along with him. Remember what I said about Ted Bundy earlier in this sporking: He volunteered on a crisis hotline at the same time he was most actively murdering women.
I've only known personally one charming, handsome sociopath (a friend's abuser, the model for James in 'Liberacorpus'), but I've known a number of alcoholics and other people who have let themselves sometimes do terrible things while thinking of themselves as fundamentally good, decent people.
I have a lot of experience with psychopaths/sociopaths (I use the terms interchangeably.), and even more with narcissists and other vermin of the type you describe. During a discussion with sharaz_jek, I proved my maternal grandmother was more evil than either the comic book supervillain Darkseid (whom sj had compared to Dumbledore), or his henchwoman, Granny Goodness. In fact, I started calling my grandmother EvilHag (in my head) after that discussion because I figured if she had acted like cartoon supervillain, she should have a name like one. Do you know how I knew instantly, in the first chapter of PS/SS, that AD was evil? He was described and fawned over exactly like my family speaks of my blessedly long (but not long enough) dead grandmother. She was a narcissist, not a psychopath. But as marionros would be happy to confirm, they can do about as much damage as psychopaths, to those around them, if not to society as a whole. Psychopaths are just slightly exaggerated versions of narcissists.
You're correct in thinking that AD wanted to think well of himself. Psychopaths and narcissists do that effortlessly, just because they're so damned wonderful, it's not possible to think of themselves any other way.
TBC
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Date: 2013-05-31 06:24 pm (UTC)Barty, confronted with a Horcrux in the shape of a toddler, could kill the baby and justify it (to himself at least) as necessary for the final destruction of Voldemort. (Whether he could get away with doing so publicly might be a separate issue.)
But someone's who's too noble to use evil, even to fight evil, can't do that.
Talk is cheap. So is disapproval. AD’s alleged feelings mean nothing if he's not willing to act on them to protect those who can't protect themselves. That’s what I said about Harry earlier in the sporking: Facts and reality don’t matter to him. Only his feelings do. That attitude is indicative of a primitive stage of spiritual development.
Regarding AD's being "too noble to use evil, even to fight evil," even Gandhi said war was sometimes necessary when there was no other way to stop a particularly dangerous and powerful evil force. No doubt JKR wants us to see Dumbledore as Gandhi with more hair and flashier clothes, but to sane people, they are clearly not on the same spiritual level.
As for its being more merciful to raise Harry as a suicide bomber rather than just killing him as a baby--I can't agree with that. If Harry has to die anyway, it's better for him to die when he's too young to know what he'll be missing for the rest of his life. I'm reminded of the Nine Inch Nails song, "Sin," that goes, "And if I can't have everything/Well, then, just give me a taste." I've always wondered if that meant, "Give me a taste because that's better than nothing," or "Give me a taste so I'll suffer even more by knowing what I'm missing." Knowing Trent Reznor, it's probably the latter. That's certainly the interpretation that obtains in Harry’s case.
If Harry had died as a baby, he would have died knowing only the love of his family and their friends. He would never have known the abuse, neglect, abandonment, shame, and self-loathing that he suffered at the hands of the Dursleys. What he put up with from them was bad enough; what he suffered at Hogwarts was worse. He was allowed to believe he'd been rescued from a terrible fate. He had friends, a girlfriend, a normal life, approval from authority figures (the only ones who mattered, anyway), and every expectation that he had a good chance of surviving the war and living a long, happy, prosperous life.
Then it was all yanked away from him at the last minute. Only when it was too late to back out, he discovered not that he might die, but that he MUST die. All that love, happiness, friendship, approval...it was all for nothing. He would never be allowed to enjoy it after all. His entire life had been nothing but a set up for his death. He'd been given a taste. Nothing more. And the only purpose of that taste was to give him more of an incentive to die (because he was saving all those people he'd been allowed to care about).
It takes someone of extraordinarily refined evil and cruelty to inflict that kind of mental torture on a dumb, innocent, trusting kid. To do it to a kid who loves you is more evil and cruel still. And to not even have the guts to tell him yourself, to leave it to somebody else--that's the apotheosis of evil, cruelty, and cowardice.
Albus Dumbledore is a monster. Let there be no doubt about that. Ever.
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Date: 2013-05-16 03:43 pm (UTC)However, I am struck by the stages of development. I have always felt that Sirius sorting into Gryffindor as a rebellion of his parents' beliefs seemed strange for an 11 yr-old. Children do not usually 'see' their parents as so 'wrong' at that age and I saw it probably as more of a rebellion against pressures to which an heir might be subjected than his realizing his parents' beliefs were not something he could commit himself to doing - especially since I do not see much further development in him that would suggest such an early maturity.
Your points about the timing of the change between Literalist and Loyalist at that age brought this up again for me. Sirius' hope to place in Gryffindor had less to do with refuting his parents' values and more to do with seeking peer approval from James.
It makes very little sense that Sirius could have seen his parents as having the wrong values, when he doesn't appear to have been exposed much to the values of other people yet. I highly doubt his parents allowed him to play with children whose parents held beliefs differing from theirs - so where would the exposure to other values have come? I don't think it did.
There is no indication in canon from that scene on the train that indicates Sirius thought his parents 'wrong' or even that he didn't want to sort anywhere else than Slytherin until after he heard James' opinion on the house. In fact at first he somewhat defended the house saying Blacks had always sorted there, implying he expected he would as well. To which James replies that he had thought he was an 'okay' sort, implying he must now reconsider if Sirius will be in Slytherin. It is only after this that that it is suggested that Sirius might try for Gryffindor. His house decision is based on peer pressure. He likes James and he wants his approval (Loyalist) even over his family's.
I think there is also an element of rebellion against parental expectations given Sirius' statement that his mother thought them practically 'royal' and that book Nature's Nobility. It all smacks of a semblance to an aristocratic upbringing. One in which the heir is usually held to a number of expectations about propriety and the way an heir should behave. Expectations of a high level of 'manners' that many young boys would find 'boring' with a roll of the eyes. Things that would be expected of an heir, whether the family was 'dark' or 'light'.
I see Sirius taking this more as the opportunity to cement a friendship (rather than lose it immediately upon sorting) while getting to toss all those boring 'rules' he so despises. Makes much more sense than an 11 year old knowing that his parents' values are fundamentally wrong upon the very first indication that someone else might not have the same values without even an explanation of why those are the wrong beliefs.
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Date: 2013-05-16 09:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2013-05-17 07:40 pm (UTC)This also explains why Marietta is punished so harshly for being loyal to her mother rather than her peers. Loyalty to one's peer group is the highest good in the Potterverse - unless, of course, your peers happen to be Slytherins.
Do you know what I found the most heart-breaking line in DH? Pansy Parkinson's cry of "Where's Professor Snape?"
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Date: 2013-08-24 07:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-05-22 01:33 am (UTC)Were the Dursleys caring guardians to our poor little wiizard? Emphatically, no.
Did they bash him about, break his bones, deliberatly starve him?
Equally emphatically, no.
This is canon! If they had, Harry would have mentioned it!
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Date: 2013-05-24 08:27 pm (UTC)It is possible the cupboard under the stairs evolved from a time-out place to Harry's regular residence - that he was originally placed there for a time-out, but at some point there was a string of him being placed in time-out shortly after being let out that he was just relocated there.
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