OMG, I'm writing about Deathly Hallows. Because I was having this conversation about something in it that really bugged me. So this is about something I didn't like in DH. If you are bummed out by the negative, don't irritate yourself by clicking this

By the end of the series, we have two different and contradictory explanations for how Wands work with Wizards--and now I think about it, those explanations reflect an ambivalence already present in the series.

The very first book establishes the substitution of magic for school. Harry will go to school just like the reader, but he learns magic instead of other subjects. Which is fine, but sometimes leads to a little canonical confusion between "smart" and "magically adept." When Hermione does Transfiguration on the first day of class we understand she's a good student even though wand movement is more physical than mental. In OotP, iirc, there's a conversation with a Ravenclaw in the DA where he asks why Hermione isn't in that house when she's doing NEWT level magic--again, we've never seen that being a primarily mental process. Although there are some vague references to theory or esoteric knowledge that Dumbledore has but can't explain, and things to memorize, Harry never really encounters anything beyond magic as a physical skill.

This question of brains vs. skills carries over to Wands. Which one eventually dominates? In the end, are they tools of learning or tools of battle? The answer: tools of battle. Are they like a violin or like a sword? They are like a sword.

We got the first explanation of how wands work back in PS/SS. That's where Harry's wand chooses him and we hear its particulars: It is made of holly and has a phoenix feather core. The affinity for Harry comes from the qualities of the wood and core, and the folklore and fictional connections with each one. We hear James' wand was good at Transfiguration, a clue to his being an Animagus. Lily's was good at Charms--her protection of Harry was presumably a Charm. It was another one of those built-in personality tests. Who can say if holly is a nicer wood than maple? Nobody, really, it's personal taste. Everyone is different but everyone has a wand meant for them.

Unfortunately, this goes out the window in DH when Ollivander introducers the startling idea that in fact a wand becomes "yours" if you win it from someone else in a duel, either by yanking it from them or blasting it away from them or just beating them up and taking it. Iow, whatever hints we've gotten about love or learning, it's about power. Wands instinctively "bend their wills" to the person who's the most dominating physically and magically. If someone has beaten you, your wand--that thing that's been like an extention of yourself--is no longer yours!

These two ideas are contradictory and can't both be true, and in DH it's made clear that it's the domination idea that is the true one, otherwise the story wouldn't work. (So much for that Muggleborn's tearful, "But it's my wand! It chose me!" line--it's chosen Umbridge now, lady, if she took it from you.) It's a shame, actually, because with just a little tweaking JKR could have saved the original idea. She could have said that only the *Elder Wand* (the one already uniquely created to dominate others) bent to the will of he who won it. It could have been done with little changes to the story, saved the former ideas about Wands, and avoided questions like why Ollivander thinks he knows who any Wand belongs to after it leaves his store.

But that's not what happened. Instead we have all these careful scenes showing us how Harry can't work with the blackthorn wand (does he even struggle a little with Hermione's freely lent one?), but can work with Draco's because he yanked it out of his hand and thereby won it by physically besting him. Wood and core ultimately mean nothing at all. If they did, then in the scene where Harry shows Ollivander the Wands he's brought from Malfoy Manor Ollivander wouldn't have been going on about how the wand no longer belongs to Draco because Harry won it.

If we stayed with the original idea he should have been talking about wood and core and things like that--Harry's wand was made of holly; Draco's is hawthorn; Harry's has a phoenix feather core; Draco's has a unicorn hair core. How, if as we were originally told, the wood and core are in sympathy with the Wizard, could Harry be expected to use this one easily? Well, he could if Ollivander had just said something like "This wand will never be right for you, but it could be a lot worse. The Wand might feel more cold or detached than your regular one because of the unicorn tail, and you'll probably have to cast spells with more force than your used to in order to compensate for the hawthorn wood. To someone with an affinity for holly, that wood may feel contradictory and less focused. It will feel "lighter" in general, so be careful you don't overdo it."

Or whatever. Had that happened Harry probably still could have used it to win the battle. Draco would still be the Master of the Elder wand because *that* Wand only recognizes that kind of brute force, and Harry would still be the one who defeated him no matter what Wand he was using. He just would have beat Voldemort while struggling to work with a wand that would never truly be his or feel as good as his own for him. (Of course, I can't help but already worry that's getting into dangerous territory, as if Harry is somehow learning to work with Malfoy rather than more satisfyingly dominating him and having his wand like him better.)

It would have been preferable to me personally, though. I far prefer the original idea that Wands are tools of learning that reflect each person's personal experience and the wisdom they gained through it to the one where Wands are phallic weapons turned on by the best fighter, who then just gets to choose which one to use based on whether they prefer kicking ass with a .44 Magnum or a .38 special. Certainly I think this is a hell of a thing to toss in as if it's something only somebody well-versed in Wand-lore would know, when this is the kind of information Wizards would consider hugely important and have noticed immediately.
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ext_6866: (Blobs of ink)

From: [identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com


That is so exactly what drive me crazy! The idea that these softer values were important was just an illusion--Harry had to make do with those because he was too young to kick butt but as he got older his power was what was important.

In OotP, as you say, at least there's a storyline that makes fighting important. Unfortunately that's also the book that really starts to equate lessons with fighting. The secret study club that they have because they're denied "knowledge" is really a dueling club where they fight. And then it was just all about that.

And yes to the cruel and unfeeling bit too. That's what it seemed like to me too.

The wands did used to be more like an anima. It was something that was an extension of the wizard outside his body that resonated with him/her because they were both alike. Then it was just--well, yeah, female prisoners in the Iliad. I'm surprised even all wizards are allowed wands.

From: [identity profile] fictualities.livejournal.com


I'm surprised even all wizards are allowed wands.

Isn't Hagrid denied the use of a wand? And only wizards are allowed wands -- other intelligent magical species (goblins, centaurs, house elves) aren't allowed them, and Griphook at least finds that irksome. That restriction by species might make sense if wands focused on a certain kind of mental energy -- if they were attracted to humans rather than goblins. I could imagine a universe in which goblins wanted wands and tried to use them, and could sort of use them, but ended up spoiling them because goblins and wands weren't quite suited to one another. But if wands are pure tools, like guns, that can be used by anyone who grabs them, then the wand restriction is a pure power move in an inter-species war, and an ugly one at that.

I liked the wands better in the earlier books, when they seemed much more like an extension of the wizard's personality. That just seemed more interesting to me as a world-building idea, and it didn't have the same unsavory implications as the wands-as-guns model does.

ext_6866: (I'll just watch from up here)

From: [identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com


There's definitely a pattern in the books of people being immasculated by losing their wands. Hagrid, we note, doesn't actually lose his--he's got it in his umbrella. But Voldemort essentially decrees that Lucius no longer gets one. And in DH I don't think it's at all a coincidence that the good guys are picking up more and more wands as they go on while the bad guys never turn one of theirs against them.

Muggleborns were also being denied them, with yet another magical inconsistency, the idea that Wizards could believe they 'stole' their magic.

From: [identity profile] aasaylva.livejournal.com


people being immasculated
OMG yes. When I read DH, I kept wondering whether my fanfic-soaked brain made me see things that were not there, but meanwhile I think it is so obvious - I'd just like to know whether her phallocentric adoration of uberstrong maleness happened on a conscious level or not.
ext_6866: (Mag-zilla)

From: [identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com


I used to think the Weighing of the Wands chapter in GoF was the funniest Freudian joke of the series. Who knew the whole last book would be based on it?

From: [identity profile] aasaylva.livejournal.com


Sporfle! Never even thought of that scene, but now I understand why Fleur just had to lose at this tournament - she lacked the - um - equipment...

From: [identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com


Doesn't she get to wear an apron, too?
Man, I wish I were a girl in the WW!
You get to pick out your husband right away so by the time the ugly girls are left on the shelf to become spinsters at say, 16 or so; you're already a teenage housewife (NOT THAT THERE'S ANYTHING WRONG WITH THAT, OMG, HOUSEWIVES ARE AS ACCOMPLISHED AT KILLING AS OTHER GRYFFINDORS!1!!)washing your crush's underpants.

From: [identity profile] montavilla.livejournal.com


I don't understand why the girls get wands at all, when it all turned out to be phallic joking anyway.

Shouldn't the girl focus their energies in cups?

Then you could really develop that porno wands idea... (which I'm thinking would make for hilarious fanficcing!)

From: [identity profile] aasaylva.livejournal.com


Well - it's not that Molly and Celestina Warbeck weren't thinking along those lines with their cauldrons of hot strong love... And no wonder poor Harry was disgusted by it...
.

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