this post was submitted on 16 Aug 2023
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[–] [email protected] 65 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Considering the statistics for tattoo removal in general when compared to the rate of gender de-transitions, I'd be genuinely flabbergasted if this post wasn't true.

For me personally, I don't have an issue separating Rowling from HP. IMO, she retconned herself out of the HP universe the day she tried to make wizards shitting themselves canon.

[–] [email protected] 45 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (5 children)

Considering HP is some Tory wet dream of cringe inducing bullshit, hopefully some people grew up and realized its a badly written childrens book.

Special boy, born to provenance, only the most perfect special white boy can save the world by proving the slaves love slavery.

Like people complain about Mary Sues, but isnt Potter himself a perfect example of a Mary Sue who is just "naturally good" at magic?

[–] [email protected] 30 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Like people complain about Mary Sues, but isnt Potter himself a perfect example of a Mary Sue who is just "naturally good" at magic?

I've become very disillusioned with HP, and haven't really been able to separate it from jkr personally, but this just isn't true.

Harry is only notably good at defense against the dark arts spells, and even then he only gets good at them because those are the spells he has to put a lot of time and effort into practicing, or is forced to use on a regular basis in order to protect himself. Outside of that he's actually just kind of average at magic at best. He only masters spells that he takes the time to practice. He's almost never good at a spell the first time he uses it, or even the first few times. A lot of time and effort is dedicated to him just learning something as simple as accio.

The character who was closest to being naturally good at magic was Hermione, but that was because she was studious and actually practiced spells and magic all the time, not because of a natural talent with magic and nothing else. I don't think there was any character who was just naturally good at magic without putting in the work, except maybe Voldemort himself.

There are lots of issues with the HP books don't get me wrong, but Harry being a "Mary Sue" type character honestly isn't one of them. Even the "chosen one" aspect of his character is deconstructed when it's revealed that Harry wasn't the only option for the role, he was just the one that Voldemort went after first by chance.

Edit: Also, while JKR definitely handled the house elf thing very distastefully, Harry was never a supporter of keeping house elves as slaves. He was more supportive of Hermione's attempts at getting awareness than Ron was, and he was also sympathetic to Dobby's attempts at convincing the other house elves to defect. JKRs problem wasn't that she depicted slavery as a good thing because she honestly did try to depict it as a bad thing, her issue was not actually following through with what she set up. There were slaves in real life who wanted to stay as slaves and didn't want to be freed, because trauma and mistreatment can warp how someone feels about their own captivity, so that can be an interesting and nuanced topic to depict and explore. But instead of seeing through that plot to the end or actually addressing that concept in detail, it was like she just dropped that plot thread almost entirely after that point, so the last major development regarding house elves was "well slavery IS bad of course, but they WANT to be slaves and would be unhappy if we freed them, so what can you do 🤷 Dobby is just the only one smart enough to Get It". She never addressed how it was the only life they knew so their fear of the unknown was clouding their judgement, or how abuse victims are conditioned to think that they deserve or even need or want to stay where they are even if they're not actually happy (and being patronizing about them "wanting" to be slaves isn't helping them in any way shape or form either. Even Dobby felt the same way other house elves like Winky felt when Harry first met him, but his sudden freedom allowed him to protect his friend, so he started off on good terms with freedom as a concept, as opposed to Winky, who gained freedom through traumatic means instead). She didn't even address how obviously there are house elves who aren't happy being slaves (Dobby being a prolific example), and they don't deserve to remain as slaves just because other house elves have been rejecting freedom because of their conditioning/fear/trauma/etc. Or how even IF there are house elves that genuinely want to be slaves, it should be something they get to choose on an individual basis, not something forced on them as a species, etc, etc. JKR basically just wanted slaves in her world for the aesthetic™, but didn't want to take the time to actually address the issue in depth or portray it respectfully.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Based take.

I cannot separate the art from the artist either. Too much of her worldview exists in the media imo.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

HP isn't a mary sue because he didn't need to be. He was a rich kid who inherited both fame and adoration from most of his new world. The most powerful people in the world were his new teachers and they favored him. He attracted friends like a normal protagonist but they weren't that special. The real thing that made HP effective is that Voldemort was a friggin idiot. Instead of taking over more of the wizarding world and subjugating powerful institutions, he was pretty hellbent on just killing Harry. Which allowed all Harry's powerful allies to focus on defeating him.

Agreed with the house elf thing might actually be realistic in the setting. The kids and adults had more important things to focus on. Deprogramming thousands of elves might have taken away from not getting horribly murdered. But since this is a story, there really should have been follow-up. Even in the epilogue when a decade passes they could have addressed it. In the movies on the train platform with the kids at the end they could show free elves and give a one line about it.

[–] GlitterInfection 24 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

The hill I die on all the time is that the Harry Potter movies are so significantly better than the books in large part because they took out the "slaves love slavery" plotline.

I hate the term "Mary Sue," though. It's a bit sexist. I prefer to call them "Wesley Crushers."

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

Man, Wesley Crushers is such a better name for it. Thank you.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

I personally always really liked the games. Like the first three on PC (the PS2 versions seem good as well, I just had the PC versions), and those had the huge advantage of being scored by Jeremy Soule.

And I gotta say, the environment artists on Hogwarts Legacy really knocked it out of the park. I've watched some streams and videos and the castle and Hogsmeade look really cool.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Oh sure as an adult I can see that. But I'm not going to deprive myself of nostalgia simply because times have progressed. Sometimes I like to enjoy my childhood again and put on a movie or show or book from when I was young that may not hold up now. As a grown up, I can enjoy it with nuance. But you make a good point and that's why HP isn't a bedtime story for my kid lol.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

Agreed, and it is good to enjoy things!

I was older, so Harry Potter felt pretty thin to me when it came out. I had been reading Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy and Discworld stuff by then...

However, I have a similar feeling around the Grand Theft Auto games. When I was younger I just thought they were crass and funny. As I got older I saw them as a humorous and often accurate mirror of US society. The enjoyment, however, would wane when I realized how few people saw or understood the commentary but instead embraced the worst aspects of the games. It is harder to go back now and not see so much of it being horribly interpreted by the audience, even if I found the social critiques to be funny. It taints it a bit, but it doesn't mean I can't sometimes still just enjoy it for what it is.

[–] Darorad 2 points 1 year ago

That makes sense, I whish I could do the same. HP was what got me into reading and I met quite a few friends at HP themed summer camps and stuff. I just have a hard time separating art from artist, as I'm enjoying it there'll be something that reminds me of jkr's gross views and it pulls me out.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Perfect time I think to recommend Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality.

126 chapters of pure joy that fixes how shitty of a character Harry is. One of the better pieces of literature I've ever read. Wish I could forget it and read it again.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Also Wizard People, Dear Reader which is the most fucking amazing rendition of the first Harry Potter film of all time.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

I read that forever ago. I really liked the solution for dealing with the antagonist at the end. I'm wondering if the canon would invalidate it in any way. It seems such a simple solution that we saw effectively work in one of the books.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

HP is terrible in almost every respect. The only part she got really right was the ability to draw people into a fantasy world they wanted to live in. At least at first blush. There's so much squick in there for a kids book its unreal.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

I think a large part of it is the interesting visuals (well, descriptions of them), like everything being crooked and off base in Diagon Alley, and the silly names, like Diagon Alley. For a kid or teenager, that's pretty interesting and unique.

I actually genuinely think she never expected to write more than one or two books. The first one feels a lot like she was going for something Terry Pratchett-esque, like a parody/comedy version of a fantasy setting. Like, a lot of the silly naming conventions started appearing less and less as the books went on.

[–] [email protected] 28 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

There's a pretty good take about how the thing that made Harry Potter the big superfad was the marketability, that you can show circular glasses and a lightning-bolt and everyone gets it. (Here we go! Verilybitchie on YouTube)

This is the thing that got Warner on board and willing to invest millions (in late 1990s dollars) to start not just the movie, but the sequels.

While Rowling's conservative values become evident in the movie (behaviors done by antagonists to show they're baddos is condoned when done by protagonists, elf slavery is good, etc.) is sometimes forgiven in other series when the author doesn't use their gains to support scary fascist movements that want to genocide people.