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sistermagpie ([personal profile] sistermagpie) wrote2004-11-01 03:47 pm
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It sucks to be the Sorting Hat

Super-Fandom-y pre-US-Election-Day post for flist variety.:-)

I've been thinking about this for a while...it's perhaps almost a rant, but maybe not. It's about this phenomenon that probably reflects the HP books but also makes fandom less pleasant sometimes, or at least keeps people from communicating. And it drives me crazy because I'm always getting accused of it.:-) Perhaps not unjustly so, for all I know, so I want to talk about it.



My favorite part of OotP was the Sorting Hat song. Finally, I thought, a good idea. It got ignored, yes, and I assumed the students would learn they were wrong about doing that. But being in fandom, I feel like you can really see how difficult that's going to be, because damn, people love to see Gryffindors and Slytherins fight. It seems sometimes like they exist on a see-saw where cutting one down automatically raises the other or vice versa. I've seen this go both ways, where, for instance, somebody says a Slytherin did something bad in a scene, and the response is, "But the Gryffindor was doing this bad thing!" Or, "Gryffindor sucks. He did X," responded to with, "How can you say he's worse than Slytherin! Slytherin did Y!" Sometimes it gets tangled up in motive as well-“Well, yes Slytherin did X, but he was responding to Gryffindor doing Y!" or vice versa. Which is weird to me because honestly, you'd think that it was unheard of to examine the actions of someone reacting to something else! I mean, even if you're talking about a literal self-defense situation, you can still examine the actions of what someone did. If I killed someone to stop them from killing me or someone else I might feel I did the right thing but I could still accept that I actually killed someone without pretending I did something else (like "counter-killed" them). It doesn't mean I'm denying that the other person was about to kill somebody.

Now, there are some situations where bringing in one house to talk about the other makes a point--for instance, if one is pointing out a specific double standard, explaining somebody's motives in a scene or how it would look to the other person. Or contrasting a character's stated moral belief and the one they live. The houses do obviously egg each other on and often bring out the worst in each other, so it's hard to keep them completely separate. But I feel like those valid connections seep into places where they don't belong in fandom, just like they do in the books.

This kind of see-saw effect just seems to be everywhere and when I think about canon it seems fundamentally off. Gryffindor and Slytherin are not natural opposites the way they're often portrayed in the collective fandom mind. They're both, imo, representing certain different outlooks on leadership that have existed in the world. So rather than look at the qualities the hat lays out in PS/SS that people usually use to describe what makes a Slytherin or a Gryffindor, I want to try to look at exactly what we see in canon and what that tells us about the flaws and strengths of each house.

It's hard to find a strength for Slytherin because let's face it, they haven't really been given any. We barely see them, so there's little we can really say about how they function. This is what we do see: They judge people based on their breeding. They're snobs. Purebloods are better than half-blood, who are better than Muggleborns. They move in a pack (or at least are described as being a gang from the outside) which is exclusionary. They make fun of people outside their gang. It's not quite correct to say they laugh at others' pain on principle, because they have of course been shown to get upset over other peoples' pain as long as that person is one of them. Usually we see them acting on their own personal desires and that's it. So it seems like what they represent is a system where all people are not created equal, where the world is a strict hierarchy. They tease, humiliate and insult those who show weakness. At their worst they become Death Eaters and decide people not like them don't have a right to live.

On the positive side, they probably do appreciate history, can have a healthy (as well as an unhealthy) respect for authority, they can be creative and fun. Perhaps most interestingly, there are two Slytherins who potentially made difficult moral choices even when it didn't benefit them personally: Snape and Regulus. Both of these characters believed in Pureblood Superiority but rejected its most extreme conclusions with Voldemort and so perhaps had to rethink the whole idea. This is probably yet another reason I despise the idea of the "good Slytherin" who unites the houses by never buying into this stuff or figuring out it's bad off-screen.

So basically, what we seem to be dealing with, with the Slytherins is a particular side of human nature, one that's brought us such charming but different things as slavery, imperialism, and genocide.

Then there's Gryffindor. Well, off the bat we've got more positive qualities. Many of these students have been shown to *want* to be good people and *want* to be unselfish, protect the weak, have humility. They like to have fun--often of the slap you on the back hard kind. They don't openly judge people based on their bloodline (though it would be inaccurate to suggest they are free of prejudice, of course).

Their danger lies more in self-righteousness and having the Slytherins as rivals obviously don't help them there, because they represent things that modern thinking considers so obviously bad that they have little reason to question whether they're right compared to the other house. They're not snobs, they're not prejudiced against Muggleborns. Unfortunately because they "know" they're right they rarely examine their own actions and they too have scenes where they take pleasure in the pain of other people because those people “deserve it.” Being against Voldemort covers just about everything they do. Hermione's justification for her Polyjuice plan is that "killing Muggleborns is worse than brewing a difficult Potion." On the surface she sounds right, but if you actually look at the facts, she's presenting what she's doing in a pretty dishonest way. And those things are important because they are exactly the type of things that cause big problems in the story.

Sirius is not wrongly imprisoned on what one might call Slytherin principles. He's wrongly imprisoned on just these principles: we know we're right, we have to keep the bad guy from getting away. If we give him too many rights, he'll use them to trick us. So we'll only give those rights to the people we already think are good guys. That, I think, is where many readers wind up shaking their head, because you have characters who know they want fairness when it applies to themselves, but don't seem to realize this particular thing you don't get by destroying Voldemort. And that's another side of human nature that's brought us other charming but different things like imperialism, the crusades, and The Patriot Act. It's that line of thinking where questioning the mindset makes you the enemy. They risk throwing away a potentially fair system because they mistakenly think Voldemort and Slytherin embody every potential evil.

These two mindsets aren't completely different--obviously you can see parallels in both of them. Both sides cast people out for questioning the party line, and in OotP especially the reflections start coming more and more often. But while they echo each other, they're also two groups of people each moving on their own potential path of destruction. Sometimes they push each other further in a bad direction or a good one, but they aren't joined in terms of really causing each other's actions. One side may provide the thing the other is reacting to, but they don't choose their actions for them. Often in the same situation they would react differently. So they shouldn't be held accountable for the other side's actions, but they still can be held accountable for their own actions and the fact that they do have consequences. They might operate on different planes but neither one is free of potential danger or immorality. So pointing out that one side at least isn't the other side or finding ways in which something one side does is also done by the other has very limited usefulness, imo. You have to be able to take them both separately and not always leap for a comparison to the other side that makes them look better.

This, to me, is probably the one way that fandom makes me enjoy the books a lot less than I would if I weren't in the fandom. Because I can deal with the events that happen in the books, and the characters thinking this way. But when I see it translated into real life as if this is the way things should be, whichever side a person is on, makes me lose a little hope that we might straighten ourselves out. Sometimes it seems like the real danger/evil that Slytherin represents is the temptation to believe in evil as a tangible, outside force. By making Gryffindor often look good by comparison, they coax the characters into darker psychological places-and those places aren't bad in themselves. They may just be a place they need to be. What's scary isn't that they go there, but that they don't realize they've gone there because they've still got those evil Slytherins to compare themselves to and say, “Nope, I'm not them. I'm completely good and innocent.” That's a wonderfully freaky idea to me. While I doubt seriously it would happen, all the good guys could wind up having committed murder, torture and blackmail and be completely consumed by rage and despair while the “bad” kids die ignorant but innocent. Because already there have been times when actual actions of one side have been overlooked while potential actions in the other are bad enough. Or, on the other side, desires of one side are overlooked in order to condemn the actions of the other. Really you've just a bunch of really messed up people.

Obviously, this post is probably coming out amidst a flurry of election posts. On one hand the idea of a little distraction-I know I'm so afraid to think of what could potentially happen tomorrow I'd rather think of anything else. Otoh, though, while I'm usually a big believer in fantasy and imagination being a good thing, I will say that I hope the half of the population of my country that seems to be living in a fantasy world wakes up in reality tomorrow. I know it would be a nasty shock to admit, all at once, that the sunny heroic picture people seem to be fond of is all a lie, that the Bush administration isn't Dumbledore or Gandalf or Captain Kirk and that all those stories about deception and chaos and disaster in the world are not creations of the liberal media but the world they live in. I love searching for the reality within fiction; I prefer to vote against fiction in reality.

[identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 12:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Slytherin makes it strangely easy to do that, because they really embody the worst, least attractive aspects of both the bullies and the victims.

Oh yes. They recognise their own bad behaviour (sort of. In that they seem to have this attitude of 'Dude, I am getting away with nasty shit here!' as opposed to 'What? Me? Bully? Just because five of us hexed them at once?'. Obviously they have as far as the Gryffindors to go in a) learning not to be assholes in the first place and b) recognising that people other than them and theirs deserve respect.)
I find it much more reassuring, this attitude of 'I'm misbehaving and I love it' than the idea of people who have no idea that they're doing anything wrong whatsoever; but I think that a lot of people have this idea that if a person doesn't recognise something in themselves, it simply doesn't exist.
So you get arguments along the line of 'Fred and George can't be bullies, they don't believe they mean any harm!' or 'Harry can't be arrogant, because he dismisses that possibility!' (or the often argued 'Harry is just liek Snape in the Pensieve scene modern parallel, because...um...he thinks so?'
I'm willing to bet the Slytherins would be much more popular both within the books and in the fandom, if they were more self-righteous; but I suppose that would bring up the possibility that they had a point. (Like, in POA, I always thought Draco should whine more, not because OMG TEH WHINING IS TEH KEWLIEST or POOR BABY DIDN'T GET TO ENUFF!11 but simply because he focussed way too much on 'Hahaha, the groundskeeper's going down!' and completely failed to mention half the time that since the creature did attack him, that he could be viewed as the victim here. (Of course, one could go on for great psychological reams here about how perhaps his mindset is more similiar to Harry's than suspected, and he'd rather make someone else the victim of the situation than be pitied for it himself, if he couldn't get some immediate benefit (such as Pansy!sympathy ;) from it.))

And of course, when the Slytherins are victims, they're unattractive ones - both physically (Harry gets dramatic fainting fits and broken limbs, Crabbe gets tentacles. Harry heroically catches the Snitch on said broken arm, Draco gets turned into a squeaking rodent and bounced. George fights through a split lip, Draco whimpers) and emotionally (they snivel, they run, we haven't seen many cry but I wouldn't rule it out in the next two books ((don't get me started on crying in the HP!verse!)), they whine, they exaggerate. In contrast, the Gryffindors suffer silently, or they get angry. This kind of reminds me of your post about 'losers' and how people can sympathise with cruel actions much more than they can stupid ones - wonder if that explains the rise in post OotP!Neville fandom, now that he's more talented and less wimpy.)

[identity profile] funwithrage.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 01:00 pm (UTC)(link)
It's a weird dichotomy here. On one hand, I'm much more canon-POV-sympathetic in that I *don't* have a problem with a lot of the Trio's behavior and do, in many cases, think that Draco/Umbridge/Dudley/etc bring it on themselves. (It's not unreasonable to give someone a black eye for saying, essentially, "I'm glad your friend is dead and you'll be next," and given the WW magical medicine available, the hexes at the end of GoF seem very much like that; if you go around saying "Whee, I'm glad the Heir of Slytherin has let out this monster that's killing everyone," you're letting yourself in for a certain amount of suspicion, thanks...)


On the other hand, the counter-jinx sort of thing takes away from what I see as the point of the first perspective, that most acts aren't in and of themselves evil but depend very much on circumstance. Yes, Draco may have deserved his end-of-GoF fate, but...an offensive spell is still an offensive spell, whether or not you're using it justly.

[identity profile] sine-que-non767.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 01:03 pm (UTC)(link)
'Why do nice girls hate me...?' 'I now call upon the leader of the Opposition to test me on my Latin grammar.' *g*

Slytherin really does have the makings of individualism along with their DE heritage. It's one of those times when fandom conventions offer great insight, imo. There's a reason Slytherin is often imagined as seeming like the 18th century French Court.

Yes, and that's why I'd contest 'DE heritage', there. The point is 'DE-ism' as a system is *not* a heritage - it's a perversion of an idea of separatism that has its merits (I'd argue), in trying to protect wizardkind from the ignorant Muggle lynch-mobs of history.

The court: I can certainly see Voldemort as the ultimate Wacked-Out Queen :) whose machinations make it politic to tread carefully around him and make damn sure you're first in the line with the results...all brittle politeness and courtesy on the surface ("Come, the niceties must be observed. . . . Dumbledore would like you to show manners. . . . Bow to death, Harry. ...", GoF graveyard). With teenagers I think it'd be more brutal, short and swift, but still a training for adult games, perhaps. (I have a tendancy to credit Slytherin's teenagers with a lot more maturity than canon shows them to have, simply because they're more interesting that way and then I can write what I want. :)

At times the "equality" (which sometimes isn't really) of the Trio makes them less stable while the Slytherin's hierarchy makes them more stable. That's not to say the Slytherins are better, just that we shouldn't pretend that there's one model of friendship to strive for.

True. I've also thought about the DA, that if Slytherins organised it, it might be a lot less back-biting and bickering, and more just getting on with it, since Slytherins could be more focused on seeing the hierarchy and responding to it. OTOH, it's hard to judge with a bunch of contentious teenagers! It feels like some of the boys could just be trying out their argumentative weight against the great Harry Potter, 'I'm as good as you anyday', etc.

people might instinctively just explain how that didn't happen because Harry being a leader is different than a Slytherin being a leader etc.

Yeah! :) Cos Draco is Teh Ebil, whatever he does... One of the best things I've found said about Draco is from [livejournal.com profile] ajhalluk:

'...rehabilitating Draco, whose only canonical crimes to date are making remarks in atrocious taste about Cedric Diggory, using bad language, and sneering in an unpleasant way, ought to be a shoo-in.'

[identity profile] millefiori.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 01:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Doesn't Sirius say somewhere that all his family were Slytherin exept himself? I was sure I'd read that....

(same anon)

(Anonymous) 2004-11-02 01:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Hee. Yeah, I was trying to "cleverly" refer to that lovely wolves-symbolizing-terrorists pro-Bush ad. (Bill Maher did an excellent rip on this the other night--and Maher, incidentally, drives me mad because half the time he says things and I say "yes!" And then he says some really stupid misogynistic thing and I growl.) I've read my Barbara Kingsolver on wolves!

(Anonymous) 2004-11-02 02:04 pm (UTC)(link)
For me, I think it's a lot more meaningful to have a character who has to really struggle not to yield to temptation (for vengeance) or to be good and generous and sweet. (That's why I used to find Mary Lennox in The Secret Garden, much more interesting that Sarah Crewe from A Little Princess). I do think that considering what Harry has endured, he does have a remarkable amount of a sort of scrappy empathy and an ability not to totally self-destruct in grief and rage.

But I also think it's really important to remember that Harry's stake in this fight isn't because of the philosophical battle, but because of the personal family legacy. I don't understand why anyone would want to strip him of motive and conflict--how boring!

I absolutely agree about the hypocrisy of Dumbledore lecturing about choice but actively perpetuating the hateful cycles (which I think the bait-and-switch at the end of PS did). It just bewilders me--if Dumbledore really has an ethical commitment to the cause, why on Earth isn't he taking advantage of his leadership? He has virtually total authority over those kids for most of the year, and no amont of fiddling has taken him out permanently yet. Why doesn't everyone have to take a term of Muggle Studies? Or do inter-House projects? Why don't they take advantage of the Prefects as a diverse unit? Why doesn't he insist on teaching them some REAL history, that they might find relevant? Why don't they have a memorial to former students who died in the first war? That's another thing that really infuriates me about Dumbledore and makes me reject him as a moral center for the book, because it just seems incomprehensible--unless he really is about consolidation of personal power for his own questionably "merit-based" oligarchy? I do feel like all the adults bear some blame here, but I think the Heads of House would cooperate--even Snape (maybe especially Snape).

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[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 03:13 pm (UTC)(link)
The Snape factor makes Dumbledore even more wildly irresponsible. I mean, he lived through the MWPP era. Did he learn nothing there? There he had these kids walking around like they ruled the place, and many teachers loved them for it. He saw how much Snape hated James, he saw Snape become a DE and he saw how valuable Snape really was. Now, I'm not blaming James for making Snape a DE in the least but saying you'd think Dumbledore would have the sense to not want to lose any more Snape's this go round. Instead he seems once again happy to pick out a few students he obviously likes--and every kid in the school would know who he favored, particularly after that bait-and-switch first year, and turn a blind eye to any possible problems elsewhere. As long as Harry knows to be loyal to him the war's won.

I do think it's weird when Harry's personal battle is tied to philosophical ideas more than it really can be. It's like the whole idea that Harry objects to Slytherin on purely idelogical terms--um, actually he hates it because it's Voldemort's house, and Malfoy's house and Snape's house...and they hate him and he hates them. So when Dumbledore pats him on the back for making a moral choice in rejecting it it's a little odd, to say the least. Slytherin had absolutely nothing Harry wanted.
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[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 03:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes--there's two things going on there. On one hand you can understand *why* a student responds the way they do to somebody taunting them. But otoh you have to really look at what they're doing and call a spade a spade. Like, self-defense is not the same thing as getting angry at someone. Or even if somebody is asking for it you're still giving it. Also, I think a lot of times in fandom even if you can understand what somebody's doing if you think about it further it brings up problems later on, but that's my point really, that we should just be able to talk about everything honestly, not that X is wrong and Y is right all the time.
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[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Which is no justification at all. And there seems to be no concept that just because one side does something bad, the other can still do something bad as well.

Yes--I mean, when I think about that line it's just so almost chilling because it sounds so reasonable. I mean, first of all, who's killing Muggleborns here? Not the kids who are getting spied on at all, but Ginny. And while Draco might have brought suspicion on himself with his crowing about the Dark Lord, so did Harry by speaking Parseltongue...would he be okay with somebody knocking out Ron and Hermione to spy on him? With Hermione's justification you have to assume guilt to justify your methods of proving guilt and everybody can probably understand wanting to do that but there's a reason we don't allow it.

Also, even referring to the problem as "brewing a difficult Potion" (I think that's what she says) is a rationalization. Surely Polyjuice isn't off limits because it's too difficult but because it's a violation of rights. I would imagine getting caught stealing another student's body would get you in huge trouble. Harry even learns this the next year when somebody gets into his confidence and turns out to be a villain. The weird thing isn't that the Trio decide to go through with this plan but also that the implications never even cross anyone's mind: is it wrong to knock these two boys out who don't seem to be bothering us at all? Should we feel badly about basically peeping on them and seeing them naked? Does their being innocent change anything? Were we wrong to throw that firecracker and steal from Snape? Everything's just good good good because they're fighting Voldemort, and when it turns out they're actually just harassing students they don't like well, that's close enough!
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[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 03:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Gobsmacked? Go me!:-)

I think I also get now why all these people(you too, if I'm not misinterpreting?) are so wary of JKR, because she never exactly makes clear whether she *realizes* that her Gryffindorish characters think this way, or whether she, too, thinks that Slytherins represent All What is Evil and should be accordingly punished.

Yes, I think that's a great way of putting it. I can't say how JKR really feels about it at this point or anything. In the books right now it seems like there's been plenty of groundwork laid to push everyone to overall unity etc. (which would not only involve the Gryffindors looking at themselves but the Slytherins having to do that as well). But other times it does sound like it's just Slytherin (or the ones we know) are everything evil and must be punished and that, to me, is no kind of happy ending or victory because of course that's not the way it works. It doesn't even get rid of the bad qualities Slytherin has because there will just be some other group to rise up and get persecuted. The idea that the bigotted kids couldn't possibly learn their beliefs are wrong logically and become better people is pretty hopeless. If we have to wipe them out you really are just edging closer to Voldemort's ideology.

Then there's also the question in our wider world, I think, where because Slytherins are so often connected to racism it's difficult for people to discuss. If you don't just label it evil you run the risk of possibly being considered racist yourself etc. Many people don't seem to want to look at exactly why bigotry is bad and where it comes from and why people have beliefs like that. You're just supposed to consider it bad and impossible for good people to understand and having nothing to do with you.

I'm sure at other periods in history there were other belief systems that were just the same, ones that today we might consider good. That's why I think I've said in the past that one of the weird things about the Slytherins is while there are some things about them that are obviously supposed to flash NAZI there are plenty of other things that seem to flash JEWS, or certainly would if they were in a 13th century text or thereabouts.

[identity profile] violet-muse.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 04:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Isn't the Sorting Hat basically just sorting the kids into their cliques tho?

Slytherins --> cool kids
Ravenclaws --> nerds
Hufflepuffs --> geeks
Gryffindors --> jocks

Yes, the lines are a bit more blurred than that... Take the Gryffindors, for example. Neville is arguably a geek--but when push comes to shove, he stands up and fights. Hermione could be called a nerd, but she's also shown an overwhelming tendency to take physical action when she believes in something. Physical is the operative word, I think, when it comes to Gryffindors.

But I think the lines are blurred because that's the point JKR is trying to make--as kids in school we tend to set ourselves up into certain groups, and the lines never really get crossed. But the truth is that we all have traits in common, and most of us could fit into any of those cliques if the circumstances were right (just as the Hat implied that Harry could have fit into any of the houses, back when he got Sorted). It isn't until we grow up and become adults that we stop looking at each other as stereotypes and start looking at people as unique individuals.

If we grow up, that is...some never really do. *wry grin*

I think the whole point of defining the houses is to make a point about school cliques and stereotypes. Rather than the kids sorting these things out for themselves, the Hat does it for them really. As the HP kids get older, JKR seems to be dropping some of the boundaries between the houses--in OotP Harry spent a lot more time interacting with Hufflepuffs and Ravenclaws than he had in the previous books I think.

I suppose I've sortof come at the topic sideways, but then I do that sometimes... *grin*
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[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 04:30 pm (UTC)(link)
This may be an ignorant question, but aren't "cliques" more of an American obsession? I mean, obviously English kids form groups of friends just like American ones do, but it seems like nerds, cool kids, geeks and jocks are more part of the American cafeteria idea--and they don't really fit the houses at Hogwarts. Slytherins aren't really described as the cool kids. Draco and Pansy arguably are, but Millicent Bulstrode doesn't really. Cedric Diggory isn't a geek and Cho isn't a nerd.

Not that I'm completely disagreeing because the houses obviously do sort people into natural groups that the kids then have to really work to break down--and then only if they choose to. I just don't know if they're based around stereotypes we'd remember from high school, exactly.

[identity profile] violet-muse.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 05:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Dunno...you could be right. I've really only got the one experience to draw from, and that's the American version. :) But I would assume that they have the same groups, maybe just with different labels. It's human nature to seek out a group to belong to, especially during the teen years when there's so much confusion and uncertainty in life anyway.

And I did say that the lines are somewhat more blurred than that in HP...the labels are more a reference rather than a cut and dried mold. But I still feel that the breakdown is clearly there.

[identity profile] funwithrage.livejournal.com 2004-11-02 05:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Exactly. There really is, now that I think about it, a conflation of "everything Gryffindor does is right" *and* "many acts are just plain evil," and these aren't things that conflate very well at all.
trobadora: (Default)

[personal profile] trobadora 2004-11-03 06:26 am (UTC)(link)
On the other hand, the counter-jinx sort of thing takes away from what I see as the point of the first perspective, that most acts aren't in and of themselves evil but depend very much on circumstance.

Exactly! I wouldn't have nearly as much of a problem with the Trio &Co. if that was acknowledged in the books, but the idea seems to be that opposing something bad automatically makes you good, and that is so simplistic it makes my head hurt.
trobadora: (Default)

[personal profile] trobadora 2004-11-03 06:33 am (UTC)(link)
With Hermione's justification you have to assume guilt to justify your methods of proving guilt

And what is worse, doesn't even seem to matter whether or not what you "prove" is guilt of innocence, because:

when it turns out they're actually just harassing students they don't like well, that's close enough!

That has to be the most chilling part of it all - that they never even stop to reconsider once they realise that their "suspect" was innocent after all. It's just Draco's goons, so what does it matter? They aren't us! It's this us-vs.-them mentality where it doesn't matter whether "they" are major villains or just a couple of boys "we" don't like that truly frightens me - "they" don't get to have any rights in that view "because" they're bad either way, and "we" never have to think about our methods because we're good simply by not being "them." It hurts my brain.
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[identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com 2004-11-03 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Those are some damn good Neville essays! But then of course I'd agree with my constant bemusement at the way these kids continue to want that stupid House Cup.

As I'm sure I mentioned at the time, I hated Neville's "heroic" scene in OotP when he launched himself at Draco when he wasn't even speaking to him, and I do think it sadly fits in with exactly what Elkins is talking about. Does Neville at that point know Harry knows about his home situation? I'm not sure. Anyway, it was so pointless and I thought wtf? Why is Neville attacking somebody for making a joke about Harry--not even crazy people? Surely he knows he's not being picked on; he's not stupid. He's been trying to hide his parents' situation so why reveal it here? Has that plant gotten to him and made him stupid?

But I think it was, sadly, just proof that Neville was finally becoming a hero in reacting so stupidly to a non-event.

[identity profile] lingzer0.livejournal.com 2004-11-03 07:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Really, as much as I like Headmaster Dumbledore, he seems a little too favorable toward Gryffindors. He makes sure that they win the House Cup Harry's first year and he is always on Harry's side. Always. It's never him handing out punishment, one would notice.

What makes this dangerous, like you said, is the fact that Harry seems to justify all this by saying to himself "I'm not in Slytherin. If I were truly Slytherin, regardless of my desires, it would have put me there. Therefore, in this society, I'm better than Slytherin," or something along those lines. He recognizes he makes mistakes, but he doesn't take responsibility for them.

This is true, and what I find interesting is that Slytherin is villainized from square one. Hagrid tells Harry that all the bad witches and wizards were in Slytherin, Ron tells him that it's bad (I think), Draco, Crabbe, Goyle, Lucius, etc are all mean - isn't there a good side to the house? Being ambitious and cunning can actually be useful if you were, say, an entrepeneur.

Another thing that gets me is that some people will just say "they're evil!" as a motivation. Yes, they want to kill Muggles and Muggleborns. But why? What makes them want to? Why are they mean? And on the other side, the randomly nice [insert Slytherin here]. People like Draco and Prof. Snape are, in canon, not nice or fond of Gryffindors, our Hero and co., or anyone else, really.

[identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com 2004-11-04 04:50 am (UTC)(link)
more! http://www.livejournal.com/users/sistermagpie/58449.html?thread=1217361#t1217361

Oh, I loathed that.
I respect Neville's bravery, even though I think his portrayal is unsubtle and I don't put anywhere near the amount of faith in bravery that JKR obviously does; (I love that with all the fantastic characteristics of four houses - brains, bravery, ambition, loyalty; there's no mention of compassion whatsoever. WW is a scary place!) because he doesn't pity himself (*coughs in Harry's direction*) and because he's capable of admitting his mistakes (*coughs even louder at the Trio*) but he's just being an ass in that particular scene.
There's nothing particularly brave in being willing to fight physically, although from PS it's been presented as such (not just with Neville vs Crabbe and Goyle, but Ron and Harry being 'bravely' willing to fight the same boys on the train.)
Neville's form of emotional courage wasn't valued in Gryffindor; hence he changes for them, and lo and behold in OotP, once he masters hexing and fighting and laughing at others; everyone's happy to pair up with him and be his buddy. *vomits*
Neville/Harry reminds me of nothing more than Harry/Ginny - he has this more prominent role (although Neville's was foreshadowed a helluva lot better than Miss Weasley's) and so now he's 'worthy' in a way he presumably wasn't before.
Harry wasn't impressed with Ginny's personality before, so she changed it and now he pays more attention. How romantic. What a beautiful lesson.

And yeah, in that scene, Draco has no idea about Neville's parents, so fighting him over it is lame. And I'm sorry, but wildly over-sensitive.
I mean, I can understand how one would think deorgatory comments about the mentally ill are in bad taste; but really, are you gonna fight everyone in the world who's ever made a stupid remark about say, 'looney bins'?
Cause that includes an awful lot of people.
And again, the joke was aimed at Harry, and there's something repellent about how quickly all the Gryffindors 'rise as one' to defend each other.
I mean, Crabbe and Goyle are treated with contempt for being 'bodyguards' and the rare instances we've seen of physical violence from them (twice, just like Neville ;) - fighting back when Neville starts in PS and throwing a bludger, which is no worse than Fred throwing a bat, albeit in a game, at Flint's face, imho) leads to them being described as bullies.
Same old, same old; I guess - defending a friend by accusing enemies of anything you feel like, then attacking them physically (while outnumbered, or while unawares - I love that people justify the OotP train hexings with 'OMG, teh Slytherin trio totally outnumbered Harry, hence it's perfectly fine for six people to attack them at once!) is the mark of true loyalty; whereas cracking your knuckles means that a) you're an evil tormentor of everyone around you and b) you sekritly loathe said friend and resent them.

[identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com 2004-11-04 05:04 am (UTC)(link)
So when Dumbledore pats him on the back for making a moral choice in rejecting it it's a little odd, to say the least.

CoS is probably my favourite book, but there's not one of JKR's series that I don't completely loathe the ending of. PoA, I suppose is closest...
But yeah, there's this idea that the hat said 'Here is the ideology of Slytherin versus Gryffindor, which do you prefer? Not a racist, hmm? Better be GRYFFINDOR!' rather than 'Gosh, Harry, you can be in the house where your parents and the Weasleys are, the one that the best Headteacher ever supposedly attended; or you can be in the one with people you hate and Voldemort attended. Good choice!'

...you'd think Dumbledore would have the sense to not want to lose any more Snape's this go round.

Making James Head boy is a very clear indication of where Dumbledore's sympathies lie (and why I can imagine Headboy!Harry, who only hexes his enemies!)
And not only MWPP era but Tom Riddle's - this talented, angry kid was brought up in a Muggle orphanage which he clearly loathed; hence the best idea for when Dumbledore has the power over his very own orphan?
Send it to Muggles you dislike!
I'm sure that will work out just as well!

[identity profile] straussmonster.livejournal.com 2004-11-07 04:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Eh, maybe I'm just being naive, but per some of JKR's comments and all of that, I got the impression that the primary reason Harry was shipped off to the Dursleys was protection.

After all, look at what the remaining DEs did to the Longbottoms--a pair of fairly bad-ass Aurors (no canon on the bad-ass part, but let's assume). One might be able to assume that, from the simple fact that he's still alive, whatever guards Privet Drive is insanely powerful.

That isn't a complete excuse by any means, but I think it's a perpetually underrated issue.

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