[identity profile] sweettalkeress.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
I recognize that this is several months after the fact, but as a Jew, I can't help but be a bit miffed by the fact that people felt the need to ask Rowling if there were Jewish students at Hogwarts. Surely that's something they could have inferred themselves, if they so chose? Yet, they were so thrilled to learn that Anthony Goldstein was Jewish straight from the author's mouth. Leaving aside for a moment the fact that Anthony Goldstein never says or does anything, ever, in the entire course of the series (and is a Ravenclaw, note, not a Gryffindor), to me that's a bit like a Jewish metalhead going up to the guys in Iron Maiden and asking permission, as a Jew, to be a fan. It is true that the members of Iron Maiden had said they'd welcome Jewish fans--which near as I can tell was without a prompt, and in any case didn't focus specifically on Jewish fans but was more a blanket "We're so accepting and welcoming that we take all types of fans!" thing. Either way I have never, ever, ever heard of anyone asking the members of Iron Maiden if they accept fans of their racial or cultural background, because that's simply not how it works--either you like Maiden's music and consider yourself a fan or you don't. Likewise, if you think there ought to be Jewish students at Hogwarts you're well within your rights to imagine there being, and the author's own ideas on the subject don't and shouldn't have to play into this at all.

And here's the thing: the UK is a fairly diverse, multicultural place already. Probably it has representatives of the majority of races, cultures, and creeds that have ever existed living there (granted, this is not to say that it's without discrimination or prejudice--but that's slightly off-topic). So...shouldn't it be reasonably expected, that if a group is represented by a cross-section of the UK's population (Hogwarts is the leading British wizard school, Iron Maiden are a British band and initially gained traction in the UK before going international...), that group will contain at least a few Jews by definition? Because there are plenty of Jews that live in the UK. I even met some of them when I studied abroad there.

I just think it's ridiculous that these fans can't come to their own conclusions about this, but instead have to ask the author about it. Can they not make their own decisions about anything related to the series at all?

Date: 2015-05-01 07:17 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] oryx_leucoryx
Having the Blacks be a different race would show that wizarding 'racism' is orthogonal to our sense of racism, as they were a powerful family while they lasted. And having them be the black Blacks would be exactly the sort of thing I'd expect of Rowling.

If not only Algie but the entire Longbottom clan were non-whites I'm not sure how that were to play to racist stereotypes?

Of course when Rowling started writing she had no idea Neville was going to become a significant character, nor do I think she thought out Sirius' family background before she completed GOF (specifically, I don't think she had planned on Sirius and Bella to be cousins).

As for the trio - you know, she could have reversed the stereotypes. But she couldn't, because Hermione is a self-insert, and Ron is her best friend from school. But there once were speculations about Hermione being an ethnic minority, possibly Jewish, in the early days of fandom.

Hmm, Tonks could have had some interesting ethnic background from her father's side. Since she was invented specifically to answer the question of female representation anyway.

Or you know, Rowling could have made better use of the non-white students she already had in the story, rather than keeping them as failed romantic interests for Harry and Ginny. Except she couldn't because the only one who is allowed to do any resistance to tyranny on stage is Harry and the only one allowed to solve problems is Hermione.

Date: 2015-05-05 02:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jana-ch.livejournal.com
I know we’re not allowed to say so these days, but statistics matter in this sort of thing. Ethnicity is not random. Although there are more non-white Britons today than there were in the Nineties (when the events in canon took place), and there were more in the Nineties than there were in the Seventies (during the First Vold War), white people are still by far the majority in Britain. Therefore, in a story set in Britain, if a character’s color is not specified, one is justified in assuming that person is white, without people thinking one is racist for assuming that. It’s simply a matter of statistical liklihood.

Likewise if a story is set in China and a character’s ethnicity is not specified, one is justified, by statistical liklihood, in assuming the character is Han, and not, say, Uighur. It’s not impossible that, in a Chinese version of the Potterverse, the Blacks or the Grangers or the Evanses would be Uighurs or Mongols or Tibetans, but the odds are really against it. And if it were the case, it would have a major impact on the story that we do not see happening in canon.

(HP fan currently living in China popping in...)

Date: 2015-05-08 03:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vermouth1991.livejournal.com
This is the bravest LJ comment I've seen in a very, very long time, [livejournal.com profile] jana_ch. In an age where it's in vogue to spout pretentious BS such as "Don't play the 'historically accurate' card when you depict rape in fiction, because it's misogynistic to do that, period," it is indeed becoming a revolutionary act to tell the truth as it is (Sorry for butchering your line, Mr. Orwell), no matter how uncomfortable it might be.


For those who are interested in knowing, China has a population of 1.5 billion, and according to the latest census, about 92% of it are of Han ethnicity, and the rest are spread amongst 55 "ethnic minorities" (the largest of which has a population of some 20 million, and the smallest amount to about 2,000 to 3,000 people) and a very small number of foreigners who had obtained Chinese citizenship. A big percentage of non-Han Chinese people live in the five autonomous regions (Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Ningxia, Guangxi and Xizang/Tibet) which are province-sized areas with much more political autonomy than your average Chinese province, and also the autonomous prefectures and municipalities contained within a number of provinces. There's also a substantial number of minorities living in large cities. In the past 60+ years the regime has been doing a lot in trying to solve and smooth away the stress and friction between ethnic groups, with the main brand of "racism" here being Han-chauvinism. A huge deal is constantly being made via education and propaganda of the importance of every ethnic group doing their part in shaping the country into what she is today, such as the people in every region doing their best to fight the Japanese invaders from 1931 to 1945 (Tibetan caravansaries of the ancient Roads of Tea and Horses, for example, helped transport precious Hump Course war supplies to the southwestern home front).

So if we were to set a parallel magical world over here, it would depend a lot on the location of the castle. If it's hidden in, say, Beijing, then the background characters would make sense to be mostly Han people, and if it's set in Lhasa, it would make sense to have a large percentage of Tibetan and other minority groups in the characters' makeup. To bring it back to @jana_ch's original point, statistics do matter in this kind of thing.
Edited Date: 2015-05-08 03:02 am (UTC)

Date: 2015-05-08 04:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jana-ch.livejournal.com
I chose the analogy of Han mainly so there would be no white people involved, and my readers might be able to see past the supposed racism. I hesitated to use it precisely because population proportions are not at all the same; there is a far greater numerical disparity between Han and other ethnicities in China than between the various white ethnicities in Britain on the one hand, and its non-white population on the other. But as a general analogy rather than a precise numerical rule, the comparison holds.

Besides, I have for decades had an interest in the Central Asian peoples, especially the Tibetans, and I went to grad school with someone who is now a recognized authority on the Uighurs. (Hi, Stan! No, I’m sure he’s not reading this.)

Thanks for your supportive words. I was afraid I might get hammered for this. And it might still happen, but having even one person understand my point and support me makes a huge difference.
Edited Date: 2015-05-08 06:08 am (UTC)

Date: 2015-05-29 02:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vermouth1991.livejournal.com
Not sure if this is terribly on-topic, but I'm sensing yet another [][][][]storm brewing as the news comes out that Tilda Swinton is hopeful to being cast as The Ancient One in the upcoming Dr Strange film. Tumblr and Twitter had already been eroding my brain with their outcries when Benedict Cumberbatch was cast as D.S. (because the character is Latino in the comics, though my more Marvel-savvy brother told me that he started off as white) and now they seem to be casting a white person as a Tibetan-Asian character. But then ther's also the gender-flip to consider.

I think a big part of the problem is that America is a great melting-pot, and a lot of people want to reflect that in the movies, but sometimes it's hard to let an America production be truly "global" despite the melting pot thing going on. They're reaching too far and their arm gets the proverbial cramp.

Date: 2015-05-29 03:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jana-ch.livejournal.com
The new version of Dr Strange is Latino? I had no idea! Back when I knew him in the Sixties through the early Eighties, he was most certainly white. Stephen Strange is not exactly a Hispanic name. When did they turn him into a Latino? Strictly speaking, “Latino” is a linguistic category, not a racial one, but the original Dr Strange was not only pale-skinned but a native English speaker as well.

Date: 2015-05-08 03:15 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] oryx_leucoryx
I don't have a problem with the *number* of non-white characters. I was pointing out how marginal their roles were in the story. Not the same thing. (Also sympathizing with the reader who specifically disliked their use as failed romantic interests.)

Date: 2015-05-17 02:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jana-ch.livejournal.com
The vast majority of the characters in canon are marginal. One might say that the only non-marginal characters are Harry, Hermione, Ron, Dumbledore, and Snape.

Yes, the non-white characters are all unimportant tokens, but most of the white characters are insignificant as well.

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