[identity profile] t0ra-chan.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
In time for Halloween JKR gave us another short story (more background info to be honest, it's not like it has a plot). You can read it at Pottermore (if you have an account and can actually remember your user name and password) or you can read it here: J.K. Rowling writes Harry Potter Halloween tale profiling 'malicious' Dolores Umbridge

My personal take on this little story is that it's wholly pointless. It just repeats that Umbridge was always a nasty person with no depth to her and she's worse than blood purists. Nothing really new or insightful is revealed, nor do I believe did anybody care to know this sort of stuff about Umbridge. I also found it very unbelievable that anybody would buy her claims of being a pureblood, considering how small the wizarding community is. And of course she was a Slytherin, because where else could an evil person in HP have come from.

Date: 2014-11-03 12:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aikaterini.livejournal.com
/So, is that (working as a magical janitor) very much looked down on in WW?/

Maybe this is another case of JKR adapting real-world attitudes in her books, like she did with Filch. Except, as it’s been pointed out in this community, there’s no point for a Squib to be a janitor when a witch or wizard could just wave their wand and clean everything. A similar disconnect happens with Quidditch (when the majority of Slytherin’s players are big and bulky, despite riding a broomstick, which would seem to indicate smaller and lighter players), Crabbe and Goyle being Draco’s bodyguards despite not being very intelligent or skilled at magic, and Harry’s comments to Krum about Ginny having a “big bruiser” for a boyfriend.

/After what happened in the forest I very much doubt her fear of centaurs can be just waved off as "terror of the unknown and the wild"./

Yeah, if Umbridge was afraid of the centaurs before, that experience only served to justify her fear.

/Never mind that this "inappropriate way to dress" spiel would make Petunia proud./

Yes, I don’t understand why a plastic little bow was so repellent to her. I mean, I can see where somebody would think that an adult wearing a plastic bow and frills and a tiny handbag were weird, but repellent? I guess that JKR’s never been to ComicCon or a similar cosplay convention.

Plastic bow, frills, little handbag

Date: 2014-11-03 04:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] terri-testing.livejournal.com
Well, and when was this? It's out of fashion now, but.... If this woman had been the instructor in a class Jo was taking, this could be any time from the late 60's on. (Though it sounds like Jo was older.) This sounds like an older woman who'd been told, "You need to try and look more feminine, dear" and was desperately following suit.

Re: Plastic bow, frills, little handbag

Date: 2014-11-03 04:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merrymelody.livejournal.com
It's not like JK has much time for the converse of overly femme dressing - looking butch. Look at how she scorns Millicent Bulstrode, or the 'mannish' Rita Skeeter.

Re: Plastic bow, frills, little handbag

Date: 2014-11-03 06:54 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] oryx_leucoryx
Yes, there is a precisely correct level of femininity in Rowling-world. Too much or not enough are evil. Everyone should strive for the Goldilocks sweet-spot.

Re: Plastic bow, frills, little handbag

Date: 2014-11-03 07:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oneandthetruth.livejournal.com
But what's weird is that it's also OK for a girl to be obnoxious, aggressive, and overbearing, as long as Rowling approves of that character. Ginny's the best example of this, and Hermione sometimes is.

I'm now imagining all the females in the Potterverse walking a tightrope high above a yawning chasm filled with thousands of stereotypical butch girls, ultra-feminine girls, and whatever other examples of femininity Rowling thinks are inappropriate. The female characters carry one of those long poles and glance down anxiously as they struggle not to fall into the abyss and become one of those "bad" girls of which their creator doesn't approve.
Edited Date: 2014-11-03 07:47 pm (UTC)

Re: Plastic bow, frills, little handbag

Date: 2014-11-05 04:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vermouth1991.livejournal.com
Damning a woman for dressing in and liking womanly stuff. Now that's something I haven't heard of.

Re: The Prince's Tale

Date: 2014-11-10 02:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vermouth1991.livejournal.com
Did the site eat your post, or did you find something worth editing further and pulled it down?

Date: 2014-11-11 06:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oneandthetruth.livejournal.com
Neither one. It posted the entire, 10-page chapter on the main page instead of hiding most of it behind a cut, so I took it down to try reposting later.

Re: Plastic bow, frills, little handbag

Date: 2014-11-06 04:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hwyla.livejournal.com
It isn't even that JKR had to have taken the class in the '60s. In fact, the teacher's little bow would not have stood out so much in that time period. It really sounds more like a woman who developed her style in the '60s and then never changed with the times. Keeping to the styles of her youth.

One thing I find funny is remembering the styles of early some early new wave female singers - the floppy hair bows, crinolines and the frilly ankle socks with heels. Now imagine Dolores as THIS version of the 'little girl' look!

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