sistermagpie: Classic magpie (Huffy)
sistermagpie ([personal profile] sistermagpie) wrote2008-03-09 03:23 pm
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In which I'm again disappointed by JKR explanations

So here's what JKR has recently said about Dumbledore, getting more into his sexuality:



"I had always seen Dumbledore as gay, but in a sense that's not a big deal. The book wasn't about Dumbledore being gay. It was just that from the outset obviously I knew he had this big, hidden secret, and that he flirted with the idea of exactly what Voldemort goes on to do, he flirted with the idea of racial domination, that he was going to subjugate the Muggles. So that was Dumbledore's big secret.

Why did he flirt with that?" she asks. "He's an innately good man, what would make him do that. I didn’t even think it through that way, it just seemed to come to me, I thought 'I know why he did it, he fell in love.' And whether they physically consummated this infatuation or not is not the issue. The issue is love. It's not about sex. So that's what I knew about Dumbledore. And it's relevant only in so much as he fell in love and was made an utter fool of by love. He lost his moral compass completely when he fell in love and I think subsequently became very mistrusting of his own judgment in those matters so became quite asexual. He led a celibate and bookish life."

Clearly some people didn't see it that way. How does she react to those who disagree with a homosexual character in a children's novel? "So what?" she retorts immediately "It is a very interesting question because I think homophobia is a fear of people loving, more than it is of the sexual act. There seems to be an innate distaste for the love involved, which I find absolutely extraordinary. There were people who thought, well why haven't we seen Dumbledore's angst about being gay?" Rowling is clearly amused by this and rightly so. "Where was that going to come in? And then the other thing was-and I had letters saying this-that, as a gay man, he would never be safe to teach in a school."


So this is how a lot of this doesn't fit with my own interpretation. EtA: It's been pointed out to me that this line caused some confusion--I'm not disagreeing with "He is a character that just happens to be gay" or that Rowling concurs with that idea. I'm saying I had a different interpretation of why he'd be attracted to Grindelwald's ideas based on what I read in canon. So I took out the last paragraph of the quote, which wasn't really needed.

As an aside, if Dumbledore is celibate and maybe never consummated his relationship with the evil Gellert, that actually *is* the point according to many people, because as many will explain, the problem isn't having "gay feelings." The problem isn't love. The problem is you're having sex with someone of your gender. If you don't "choose to sin" by actually having sex, you're not entering into that wicked "lifestyle" they don't like. Dumbledore's done just what a gay man is supposed to do according to many anti-gay opinions. It actually is about sex: a-sexual gay men are always more acceptable than sexual ones.

But the weirdest thing here to me is in the second paragraph, where Dumbledore is apparently an "innately good man" who only flirted with essentially *being a Nazi* because he became a "fool for love." This is bizarre to me because frankly, I don't have any trouble trying to figure out why Dumbledore would have flirted with taking over Muggles. This is a guy who's constantly manipulating everyone, thinks he's smarter than everyone else, treats them as pawns that are morally inferior to himself...why on earth would it be hard to imagine him deciding to dominate Muggles "for the greater good?" Of course he would think the answer was having the right people in charge.

But it's disappointing in a familiar way, the way that once again something that seems to be an inherent flaw in a character on the good side that totally mirrors the evil they're fighting, the author wants to make it the fault of the evil characters. Dumbledore's "love" says no more about him than Harry's Voldemort sliver. It takes the blame for unacceptable behavior. Suddenly Dumbledore's real racist tendencies (unlike Snape's) don't come down to his own desires or his own personality. He's acting unlike himself because he's been vaguely "made a fool by love." And love, as we know, is just some random thing that hits you like Cupid's arrow or the author's pen. It's not even presented as something you can analyze in terms of...well, why exactly did you find Hitler so attractive? Doesn't that say something about what calls to you? (Without even getting into the fact that this most poisonous loves is the one gay one.)

The author here seems to be saying that she needed or wanted Dumbledore to have flirted with all of this, but then needn't to figure out why he would do it. Rather than looking at the character and saying, "Ah, I can totally see how this guy would be attracted to this." Instead it "just came to her" that "he fell in love." It's about someone else, something beyond his control. It's about this other person. He "lost" his moral compass because he fell in love (which was beyond his control to begin with)--his compass never truly pointed to this.

Dumbledore himself even agrees! He becomes mistrustful not of his moral compass, not of his own abilities to know right from wrong. No, he becomes asexual, deducing that the problem is that he needs to keep himself pure from others so that he can always be sure he's relying on his own "innately good" moral sense. He's got more reason to keep secrets; he doesn't decide he maybe ought to keep other people around to make sure he's not going down the bad path again. Listening to other people can only be trouble.

Well done, Dumbledore! Way to be morally superior about your own past as a wannabe Nazi!

[identity profile] jollityfarm.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 09:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember hearing a man on TV expressing the opinion that, while gay people could certainly have sex, there was no way they could make love. I've seen plenty of homophobes express the opinion that gay relationships do not contain love, because true love can only occur between a man and a woman.

I believe this is her way of saying "I am doing something brave and controversial here, look! This is what really gets all those homophobes going, not the sex stuff!" and so she can feel as though she's done something. I myself am not impressed, but I'd be willing to bet a small amount of money that she (and her supporters) would somehow try to turn this opinion around to me being the homophobe, because I'm trying to make it all about sex and hurgh flurgh hurf durf. As I said before, fuck her.

[identity profile] ellid.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh God...I have this image of people doing everything they could to *avoid* "those awful Potters. All she can do is prattle about her children, unless she's drunk - "

"Is that when she starts whinging about being a quidditch star until she got pregnant?"

"The very same!"

"He's even worse, you know. Insists that he's fine, just fine, even though his godson was caught running drugs for the Muggles - "

"He wasn't!"

"He's perfect at it, you know, being able to change his appearance, and the Aurors actually *caught* him morphing into Richard Nixon."

"His mother must be rolling in her grave!"

"I'm sure."

[identity profile] ellid.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:05 pm (UTC)(link)
I got the feeling she made *all* of her post-DH stuff up on the spot. I mean, come on. Would she *really* have named Draco's wife "Astoria" if she'd taken five minutes to Google and found out that it's a part of Queens?
ext_6866: (I brought chips!)

[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:15 pm (UTC)(link)
LOL! I always picture Ginny showing up to the Wizard equivalent of PTA meetings and ordering everybody around and reminding everybody her husband's Harry Potter as if they care.
ext_6866: (OTP!)

[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:17 pm (UTC)(link)
I so love that. Because if you live in certain areas--like I do--you just can't hear it as anything *but* Queens. So it has a very different association than she wants it to have. (And if you don't think "Queens" you probably think "Waldorf-Astoria hotel.")
ext_6866: (Poison Pen)

[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I've never gotten the position that this has nothing to do with the story so it's not in there (unlike every random het romance) when the whole point of it really does seem to be to explain his flirtation with the dark. This "love story" actually is part of the plot...or at least is related to stuff in there. Why would so much of DH be focused on GG/DD without that coming out? Meanwhile the Grey Lady can't talk for two minutes without explaining her tragic love story? Yeah, don't get taht.

It's also sort of funny when you think...the thing is, you can't really become a-sexual, can you? That is, if he's naturally got this sex drive and loves men, what you mean is that he's repressing it or just not acting on it. Which doesn't really sound like a good thing. Unless you see it as something like alcoholism!

[identity profile] violaswamp.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
,
I remember hearing a man on TV expressing the opinion that, while gay people could certainly have sex, there was no way they could make love. I've seen plenty of homophobes express the opinion that gay relationships do not contain love, because true love can only occur between a man and a woman.


Oh, me too, but--like I said in my follow-up comment--that doesn't strike me as being afraid of love. It's dismissal of love, not fear. What they're really viscerally afraid of seems to be the sex.

After all, intense, passionate feelings between men are often celebrated without being considered a threat to anything. It's the sex that really disgusts and repels homophobes, IMO.

[identity profile] violaswamp.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:33 pm (UTC)(link)
It sounds sweet to say they're just "afraid of love" but really no, the "ick" factor of the sex is more than just an afterthought. That's why they'd cry out how terrible it is for somebody to think two men couldn't love each other without being gay. The gay sullies the love.

Exactly. That's why intense homophobia often co-exists with celebration of intense love and even physical camaraderie between males--so long as that love is never, ever tinged with sexuality.

[identity profile] violaswamp.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I think she tries, and is very earnest and well-intentioned, but manages to be oblivious to a lot of important things.

[identity profile] ellid.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Not to mention that Astoria is named for John Jacob Astor, who was a Muggle businessman. NOT precisely what a Pureblood family would name their daughter, methinks.

[identity profile] violaswamp.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:40 pm (UTC)(link)

I think it's yet another manifestation of JK Rowling's own life becoming The Way Things Are in her books.


I never realized this was going on until I read Dan Hemmens's review of DH and got to the part where he rants about the portrayal of death in the book, and suggests that the flaws in that portrayal relate to Rowling's attempts to deal with her own experiences with loss. I think he and you are probably right, which makes me sympathetic to her, but does not make the flaws any less severe.

[identity profile] violaswamp.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Seriously? Astoria? I hadn't heard that! I don't really follow the interviews unless people on my flist post about it.

Now I"m imagining Draco naming his kids (besides Scorpio) things like Jackson Heights and Flushing.

[identity profile] sydpad.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
*presses hands into temples* Oh, yay, JKR talking about people being 'innately good'. And love. And gayness. This is going to be a peach.

I just don't understand what JKR means by 'love'. Not just in this instance, in ANY instance in the whole series. So it turns out in the Dept. of Mysteries they study Love by.. drinking love potions, which as we see are a purely chemical mind-control device that's just creepy and soulless and has nothing to do with the psychology of either party, or connecting to another person, or finding mutual understanding and reassurance. Or any of that spiritual stuff in my innocence I was looking for when she kept saying the series was about Love. It's just a chemical, without any inherent moral component.

Dumbledore is 'innately good' so this external love thing just took over his brain; Snape, ditto in reverse, innately bad but he has a Manchurian Candidate trigger that brainwashes him to Do Good. Harry has a chest monster that appeared roughly around the same time as Ginny grew breasts, and Tonks looses her powers like she's caught some kind of virus. Love as a sickness or as brainwashing is an old trope and its not without some truth, but wow, I just can't square this bleak, cynical concept (which would be quite cool in a bleak, cynical book), with this hearts-and-flowers Harry-is-Jesus ending. In terms of anything approaching Christian love, or even what I'd consider base-level healthy relationship love.. I just don't see it in series ANYWHERE.

What's bizarre is that.. there's no question that Rowling has a preternatural genius for creating characters, and the story as it stands-- Dumbledore, the self-deluding, self-adoring megalomaniac, would of course fall in love with someone so similar to himself, who could express these characteristics that maybe he was a bit ashamed of. It only falls down where there's JKR's superego or whatever it making her say these things, trying to impose this thing where Dumbledore is "innately good". And love is a brain disease or a virus or something that INFECTS YOUR BODILY FLUIDS!!

Guh. So creepy.
ext_6866: (I'm as yet undecided.)

[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Me too. Or else, since as Ellid pointed out Astoria is actually named after John Jacob Astor, maybe they're called Carnegie and Rockefeller and Morgan.

Oh, and since I think Scorpius' middle name is Hyperion maybe the other kids are also named after publishing companies as well. Little Morrow and the triplets, Farrar, Strauss and Giroux.
Edited 2008-03-09 22:49 (UTC)

[identity profile] jollityfarm.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:49 pm (UTC)(link)
That's what I meant - homophobes aren't "afraid" of the love because they don't believe it exists.

[identity profile] violaswamp.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 10:57 pm (UTC)(link)
They started scheming early. More than that, they're both kind of characterized as knowing this is what's supposed to happen and they just have to wait for the guy to come around.

Yeah, she definitely buys into the idea that women always know what's going on in romance and can read the male mind with ease, while men are just helpless, clueless darlings who need to be lovingly manipulated by the right woman. This bugs me. Not only is it hackneyed and potentially harmful (for one thing, this assumption of female omniscience leaves women easily open to the charge of "leading him on" and suggests that if a man wants a woman, it must be because she's doing something to make him want her), but it rings so absolutely FALSE.

To me, the most striking quality about high school and junior high romance was how completely insecure and uncertain I was about everything--were we a couple, did he LIKE me like me or was he just being nice because we're friends, did it MEAN anything that he always sat next to me in class, etc. And not just me, but all of my female friends. If anything it felt like we were always even MORE clueless and uncertain than the guys we crushed on (which was probably just insecurity on my part, because my male friends were definitely clueless as well).
ext_6866: (WTF?)

[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 11:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Her amazing ability to create characters is like the one thing saving this. Because when you listen to her talk about this guy it almost sounds like she just doesn't see the obvious...but of course she created him so on some level it seems like she must see it. In the interview it's almost like she just shares his same blindspots--he himself would say that he was just led astray by love and it was all Gellert's fault and nothing to do with innately good him. Yet somehow she managed to write it so it was obvious they're both deluding themselves.

And yeah, love. This series has the weirdest view of love and yet it's supposed to be the basis of it. Yet the only kind of love that can sustain this sort of thing is not what we usually see--lots of people noticed that the book that was all about love (HBP) with the shipping was the one where everybody was the most hateful!

It explains a bit why the Malfoy story ultimately was just odd to me too. On one hand it seems like their love for each other is a redeeming characteristic, but again it's really not. They're still pretty much innately bad, but they have a trigger about love for each other, just as Snape has for Lily. In HBP I thought part of the point with Draco was that because he loved and was loved he wasn't a killer, and that made him a better person. Now it seems like he just lacked the guts and also was programmed to act on behalf of his family's wishes because of whatever his love potion smelled like. (Presumably it already smelled like Astoria back in HBP?)

(Anonymous) 2008-03-09 11:03 pm (UTC)(link)
She is so instinctual, it's mind boggling. It's like she Her imagination is light-speed but her intelligence walks with a limp. Everytime she tries to Give a reasonable reason as to why She wrote stuff it falls short of the mark. I'm getting more and more disappointed.

(Anonymous) 2008-03-09 11:07 pm (UTC)(link)
It's also sort of funny when you think...the thing is, you can't really become a-sexual, can you

Yes, she pretty much managed to Insult and be clueless about two sexual orientations in one sentece.

[identity profile] savagedamsel10.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 11:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I remember reading this somewhere and banging my head against the monitor. Way to go on completely verifying naysayers' cynical views there, JKR!
And the whole thing about homophobia fearing love is just NOT true. I'm pretty sure that it's more the whole sex factor and gender role factor that gets homophobes all nervous in general. Many (homoophobes) never even considered whether homosexual love could exist, especially healthy, mutual and fulfilling love (Something that Dumbledore's romance clearly isn't).
And of course the whole romance and plot relevance hypocrisy absolutely pisses me off. It seems that all het mentions are perfectly fine but the sole token gay one cannot be mentioned? And Dumbledore's off-canon UNREQUITED romance (I remember that being mentioned) has to be something that shuts him off from love? Doesn't that screw with the whole love theme? (Although that is already gloriously ruined by JKR's het romances anyway).
I just hope that she doesn't think that she should be awarded a GLAAD media award for her "trailblazing". Or even worse, that others think she deserves it.

[identity profile] violaswamp.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 11:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, and re: your earlier comments about her thinking she's done something, and her own comments about how "the issue is love, not sex," it kind of reminds me of the times I've heard people argue that it's actually racist to try and have minority characters because race is not an issue and shouldn't even be mentioned. It's like she wants to turn her erasure/concealment of Dumbledore's sexuality into a positive thing for her portrayal of gay people, which is very weird and twisted.

[identity profile] arclevel.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 11:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Word. Just so totally, word.
ext_6866: (Blah blah blah blah blah)

[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 11:17 pm (UTC)(link)
That's one of the funniest things, the way that the books are so stock full of these random ships all over the place, and whenever one of them has to do with anything happening in the story it gets mentioned. Yet this big motivation for Dumbledore's "big secret" somehow just isn't there at all. But it's not a big deal? Sure seems like a big deal. It ruined his life.

[identity profile] savagedamsel10.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 11:17 pm (UTC)(link)
Wasn't there someone who said that the way JKR handles certain themes and ideas in the HP would have been more interesting and relevant for a psychiatrist than a general reader? I always found that line rather funny.

[identity profile] ellid.livejournal.com 2008-03-09 11:22 pm (UTC)(link)
"Potter, Albus Severus."

"SLYTHERIN!"

"Malfoy, Far Rockaway!"

"HYSTERICAL LAUGHTER"

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