Friday, June 10, 2011
Blog #3
Greatest moment of The Deathly Hallows for me was when everyone started fighting together. It started with the centaurs, then house elves, and thresals all jumped in all in unity. It was so moving. I absolutely loved it.
My feelings toward Dumbledore have always been kind-hearted and endearing. Throughout Deathly Hallows I did begin to feel some resentment toward him for leaving such a mess for Harry to sort out. After the chapter at Kings Cross all ill feelings toward him disappeared and as it was clear to Harry, it was clear to me why he did the things he did. Deathly Hallows made me appreciate his wisdom and humility even more. However, the discovery of Snape’s true allegiance was less fluffy. Even though find that Snape is really a good guy and madly in love with Lily it is still hard for me to forgive his cruelty.
I would place it in a larger cultural context as one of the greatest pieces of writing for our generation. Harry Potter is the equivalent of The Beatles for novels. There never has been, and probably never will be a single series that influences a generation, and future generations the way Harry has. Yeah, we’ve had Twilight. But that is nothing. In the words of Stephen King, “Harry Potter is about confronting fears, finding inner strength, and doing what is right in the face of adversity. Twilight is about how important it is to have a boyfriend.” It has been an honor to be in this class and learn in-depth about such a fantastic series. Reading the books critically has only made me appreciate them even more, understanding meanings and life lessons I overlooked before. I don’t think I have ever been able to say that I have taken a class whose essay helped me get through personal devastations. Long live Harry Potter!
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
I Still Can't Believe It's Over
I absolutely loved the way J.K. Rowling ended the Harry Potter series. My biggest fear going into the final book was that Harry was going to have to die, and had this happened, I would have been furious. The first day I had the book, my dad picked it up, flipped to the last page and says “Well, Harry doesn’t die, I’m happy.” Although I was upset that he ruined the ending, I was still relieved that my biggest fear did not happen.
My biggest problem with the final book was that Rowling killed off so many unnecessary people. Primarily, the killings of Tonks and Lupin left me upset. I was particularly mad that it seemed like a side note that they had died at all, almost as if Rowling said “Oh by the way, they died too.” I do respectthe story coming full circle, with Harry becoming a Godparent to an orphan, but I think that Tonks and Lupin deserved a more elaborate death. The same holds true for Mad-Eye Moody. Secondly, I feel that the deaths of Dobby and Hedwig were unnecessary. I feel like Rowling included these deaths as an emotional blow to the reader, not because they were pertinent to the story.
As for my feelings towards Snape, they obviously changed. I was convinced he was truly evil after the sixth book; he did kill Dumbledore after all. However, the way it was revealed that he played such a prominent role in Dumbledore’s plan made me admire him and respect his character. I loved the way Harry refers to him as the bravest man he has ever met in the end.
My feelings towards Dumbledore did not really change that much. Ever since the third book, he has seemed more and more vulnerable so it’s not that surprising that he had flaws. I think it is very admirable that he admits his wrongdoings and uses them to guide Harry. In the end, he is still the very wise man he always was and it is his planning that led to the defeat of Voldemort.
My feelings towards Harry, Ron, and Hermione did not change at all over the course of the final book. Obviously the group had their ups and downs, but they remained close and the journey could not have been completed without any of the three of them.
Many aspects of the Harry Potter series can be related to on a cultural and societal context. I believe that one of the biggest messages the story tells is that no matter how difficult a journey looks, it is still worth fighting for and anything is possible. It also shows that individually, we are much weaker than we are in groups and we must trust those close to us in times of need.
Blog 3 (Sorry! I totally forgot about this until I was finishing up the final essays for this class!)
After reading the entire series, I am happy the story ended up the way it did. It would not have felt right for Harry to die and Voldemort to win. It would not even have felt right for both of these characters to die. Good has to triumph over evil. It is what we are used to, and it is what we want. The way Rowling makes this old theme new again is through her innovation.
I loved how Rowling used Severus Snape to be a character in question until the very end. He always seemed bad, evil, or whatever you negatively want to call him, until everything was explained through the Pensieve and through Dumbledore’s ghost. Snape, in case you did not already know, is good. If a series this dynamic was going to have a good vs. evil plot, something big like Snape’s character development had to happen.
Snape changed throughout the story. He went from a nuisance to Harry and his friends, to an equalizer in the Order of the Phoenix against the Death Eaters. He then went from what looked like being purely evil to being probably the greatest actor known to man. Snape’s development as a character is crazy and surprisingly impressive. Who knew during the first book it would really all come down to Snape? Not many, I’m guessing.
Dumbledore’s character development is a little bit harder to swallow. The way I see it, he started the series in his prime, or at the very end of it. By the end, right before his death, he seems more like an old man waiting for death to call him name. It is hard to think about how influential one character can be in a book only to have him die before the end of the story happens. Besides his physical development, I saw how his relationship with Harry developed over the books. He always has the father figure rapped up around his finger, but Dumbledore does go from a teacher to more of a guiding spirit for Harry. He is someone who affects Harry even after his death, and he will always be with Harry because of what Harry and Ginny decide to name one of their children. This way, he will always be a guiding spirit. Dumbledore had to change into this type of character Because Harry did not need a father the way he did when he is younger. Harry needs a guide to the answer, and Dumbledore knew all the right paths.
Harry grows into a man. He is very mature for his age even at the beginning of the story, and he really faces many things that others do not face until they are very old. Harry is an interesting character in the first place because of his past with the Dursley’s and not showing much trauma at all. He also shows in the end how even in the face of death itself he decides to not use a Killing Curse. That shows HUGE maturity and bravery. Harry, is a man’s man.
Ron and Hermione were never really my favorite characters in the book. They did have very important parts. Hermione was usually the person figuring something out so Harry could do it, and Rob always had his humor and random answers to problems needed solving. I like their loyalty, but I also saw them getting married as early as the 4th book. Rowling could have made that assumption a little bit harder to make.
Now that I am finished (and about to start my second half of the final for this class) I would put this series with many other series that changed social aspects. Harry Potter is a culture. People are going to be making more stories about this until something bigger and better comes out. It is a present day life changing series. It teaches loyalty, bravery, and quite possibly that rules are not always the best thing to follow. For me, I would put this as one of the best present day series of books, but I am just one opinion. I do know I enjoyed taking the class, reading the book, and actually getting to write fan fiction.
Just remember: Trust the Snape in your life, they may be doing something for reasons you have know clue even exist.
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Blog Post #3: That's All Folks!
For some reason, ever since I read the book for the first time, I have always hated Harry's fate. Even though it's a fiction novel (clearly, with you know, all the wizards and stuff), I don't think Harry should have been able to die, talk to Dumbledore, then come back to life. It just seemed all too much for me, I didn't really understand it.
My feelings about Snape definitely changed. He's still not my favorite character, but I now see him as a hero rather than a villain. My thoughts about Ron and Hermione have not changed, for they were always loyal to Harry and Dumbledore. I think in a larger social/cultural context it sends a message - we must all stick together. No matter how different you may be, there is a time when we must all come together to protect each other.
Aside from the few things that I would change, and also a cheesy epilogue, Rowling nailed it. There were no questions left unanswered, and everyone was put in the place that was rightfully theirs.
The Last Stand- Blog Post 3
I could not have asked for a better way for Rowling to have ended her series, other than the prologue (which I’m not going to focus this blog post on). I would have to say that I got the more emotional towards the middle, around when Dobby dies, than I have with all of the other books in this series, combined. Other than Dobby’s death, which is almost too painful to even think about, let alone skip over in this post, but I would like to focus more on actual scenes that had an emotional impact on me rather than just death, which everyone can relate to. My favorite scene in the entire series is the one in which Professor McGonagall calls upon the suits of armor and instructs them to do their duty and protect the students of Hogwarts. I’m really not sure why, but every time I read this, I get goose bumps and it reminds me of how much I love McGonagall. It could be that, in calling them to active duty, She could have, unintentionally, preformed the action that’s going to set the scene for the rest of the book: the battle between good and evil. Also, the scene from the Great Hall where Pansy Parkinson tries to turn Harry over to Voldemort and is followed by the Gryffindors, Hufflepuffs and Ravenclaws drawing their wands on the Slytherins, signifying that they are willing to fight, and die, not only for Harry, but for the freedom for them and their families. I feel that in showing us this scene, she is setting up the emotional atmosphere, and preparing us for the battle at Hogwarts. The only scene that I could find to be problematic would be in the shrieking shack, right after Nagini attacks Snape. The moment, after he gives Harry his memories, he asks Harry to look him in the eyes in his last hope to view the eyes of the woman he had done all of this fighting for; this is such an emotional scene and I really wish that Rowling would have emphasized the importance of Snape asking Harry to look into his eyes, as it took me a few re readings before I even picked up on it.
My feelings towards Dumbledore only changed in that I grew annoyed with that fact that he hardly told Harry any of the vital information that he had needed on his mission. I understand why he never told Harry about the fact that he was a Horcux, in that he had to give himself over in a self sacrificing manor but the fact that he never told him how to destroy a Horcux annoys me. While, after gaining new background information on Dumbledore, I didn’t find the way I viewed him to have changed much, I can’t say the same when it comes to Severus Snape. When we read the “Prince’s Tale,” my opinion of Snape changes from he’s just a bad man to he’s a good man that has many mean tendencies. My views, regarding Harry, Ron and Hermione didn’t exactly change; rather, I fully understood who they were and the full contribution that they, as a character, brought to the series. My thoughts on these three never exactly changed, but, in this last book, we got to see them put all of their previous learnings/experiences to use and brought out the in true inner heroes they were always capable of becoming.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
My Life—The End of a Chapter Entitled, Harry Potter
I grew up reading the Harry Potter Series. I grew with the characters, and the end of the series was not something I looked forward to. Despite wanting to discover how the series ended, I was disheartened and elated as I closed the book at the end of Deathly Hallows. The hardest pill to swallow was that there would be no more adventures to read about, and now that the movies are almost finished I am approaching that old familiar juxtaposition of excitement for what is to come and longing for it to never come (because then it’s truly over).
I found the truth about Dumbledore’s past to be utterly relieving because I had been mimicking Harry’s resentment throughout the seventh novel. It was horrible to think that Rita Skeeter could actually be right about something, and that Dumbledore could be wrong. I had always viewed Dumbledore as almost a god-figure before he died The Half-Blood Prince. I was disillusioned by his death because I couldn’t comprehend how the man with the plan, the man who always seemed to have another trick up his sleeve, could be dead. Also, the revealing of Snape’s true motives was especially poignant for me; I knew that he liked Lily Potter, but I never could have guessed the deep love that drove him to protect Harry. I felt an intense sadness that Snape died before Harry knew the truth.
I was so pleased with the epilogue of the seventh novel—I wish J.K. Rowling would write an entire novel about the epilogue! However, it was incredibly exciting to see the characters who I had grown up with finally be romantically linked with the people I had guessed/wanted them to be with.
In a social context, I think the Harry Potter Series can be read and related to by a wide variety of readers, which is precisely why the series has grown to be so popular. The themes of the series are so epic, so relevant to any reader that both children and adults are enraptured in the story’s adventurous persistence to love—no matter what.
Friday, June 3, 2011
Re-inventing a genre: Blog response #3
In the last few chapters, I liked the idea of the "afterlife" beginning at King's Cross. Especially for Harry, this is certainly when his life trues begins. It also matches up with the theme starting in the first book. "Death is but the next adventure to a ... mind" (Dumbledore). I forget te specific line, but the meaning is still there. Dumbledore suggests that "life" still continues after death, and a good place for a new adventure to begin is at King's Cross.
When I Dumbledore comes into the scene as headmaster at Hogwarts, he seems like a bumbling of coot who just has it together enough to keep Harry alive. There are signs that he is a bit of a puppet master because of the way that he always seems to know where Harry is and what he is up to, but he doesn't really appear to be manipulating anything significantly. By the end of the series he turns into this grand master spider - with a little Snape trainee. Snape also goes through a transformation though quite differently from Dumbledore. Snarpe starts out as this villain for Harry to focus on, and turns out a hero which Harry admires in the epilogue.
When the series first came out, people thought of it as a young adult or even a childs book. Upon finishing the series, it can be concluded that is certainly not a child's series. I would still call Harry Potter a young adult, but I feel like it has re-invented the young adult genre. Since Harry Potter there has been an increase in the quiality of young adult fiction, a ready example I have is the Percy Jackson series. It is a similar "coming of age" story, but still lacks the Harry Potter World's vividness.
Deathly Hallows Final Thoughts
That said, my perceptions of Snape and Dumbledore definitely changed with Deathly Hallows. I had a feeling Snape was good, but I didn’t know the entire circumstance—it made the fanfic writer in me squeal when I found out that he was in love with Lily. My view of Dumbledore was quite shaken as well. He was untouchable in until Deathly Hallows; he was crazy, eccentric, but we always trusted him and knew that he knew more than we did. So it came as quite a shock to find out the real reason he never accepted the Minister of Magic job. I was so upset when my view of him was so tarnished by his past; he was no better than the Nazis with his “for the greater good” slogan. It was even worse when I thought he’d betrayed Harry and thought Harry was no more than a puppet to him, from Snape’s memory. I think that scene with him at King’s Cross was really needed to gain the reader’s respect for him again—it made me cry to think of how he and Snape had both kept terrible secrets and had to suffer quietly for them for so many years.
I was really proud of how Hermione, Ron, and Harry grew up. I think Hermione was always the most mature of the group, so it was reassuring to see Harry and Ron meet her level. Harry became a much better friend than his arrogant Order of the Phoenix self, and dealt with his suffering in more dignity than he had in the past. Ron grew up by miles in this book. He abandoned them, but then realized he was in the wrong and came back to him. I loved how after he came back, he took on the role of leader and was trying to motivate them to find the rest of the horcruxes.
Harry Potter, Forever and Always
Tears of joy, sorrow, and anger are all that I can remember after reading the 7th book for the first time. I thoroughly enjoyed that 7th book because of the emotional roller coaster it put be through. Every time a character died, I cried. Every time The Trio found another Horcrux, I was proud. There are just so many great parts to this novel; I don’t even know where to begin!
One of my absolute favorite parts was getting to see Kreacher’s story and why he loved the Black family so much. I, along with Hermione and Dumbledore, always believed wizards needed to be nicer and more loving to their house elves; especially Kreacher. I would have thought that Harry would know that too through his relationship with Dobby. Harry knows house elves can be defiant of their masters they do not care for. They have to hurt themselves to do it, but it is possible. Kreacher’s story brought me to tears, but I am proud of Harry for giving Kreacher Regulus’ locket.
I also enjoyed how J.K. Rowling showed a different side of two of my favorite characters—Mrs. Weasley and Neville Longbottom. We have seen Mrs. Weasley irate at the twins or Ron and Harry, but we don’t ever see her actually use her magic to hurt someone. I LOVED that fact that the first time this happens, it’s for Bellatrix. I laughed out loud when I read that scene. I also found comfort in how Neville has grown and changed throughout the entire series. He went from Neville, the boy almost of Squib status who tries to stick up for his friends to protect the points of Gryffindor, to Neville, the man who rallies against Death Eaters and kills Nagini using Gryffindor’s sword. He is the character that has developed and changed the most in the series and I find it very comforting. I never thought Neville was sorted into the correct house, but this book completely changed my mind.
Every time someone died in Deathly Hallows I cried. There were two parts that really had me sobbing during this round of reading, and they were when Dobby died and when Harry turns the Resurrection Stone thrice in hand as he walks toward his “death” in the forest. With this being my 4th time reading the novel, I still felt like Harry was going to die, even though I knew he wasn’t going to. Rowling just describes that scene so well that it gets me every time.
The parts that I found to be “potentially problematic” were the parts that dealt with Dumbledore and Snape. I never really understood why Dumbledore trusted Snape, but I knew there had to be a pretty damn good reason. Like Harry though, I felt like Dumbledore betrayed me from keeping so much information from Harry. I put my trust in him as the reader, and I felt like if he were around everything would be O.K. Once I found out about his family situation though, I was mad. The story of Dumbledore and Grindelwald trying to find the Deathly Hallows for “the greater good” just irked me. Ariana and Aberforth needed Dumbledore in so many ways, and he failed them. With this being said, when I look back on the series, I know Dumbledore suffered from guilt every moment of his life. From when he looked in the Mirror of Erised to drinking the potion in the cave, I now know what Dumbledore actually saw, and I’m empathetic towards him. Now knowing all that we do about Dumbledore, I can see why he didn’t give all this information to Harry. He didn’t want Harry to worry about anything else, but the Horcruxs. Dumbledore wanted Harry to trust him, but by not telling Harry himself produced confusion and hurt.
Dumbledore’s story really put me on edge, but Snape’s seemed to make sense to me. Earlier in the series we see Snape call Lily a Mudblood in his memory, and both characters are hurt by it. Snape says he didn’t mean it and Lily won’t forgive him, but that’s really the moment I knew Snape loved her. He always seems to look at Harry’s eyes because they are the most obvious trace of his mother. When Snape’s love for Lily was confirmed after he died, my attitude towards him completely changed. He has lived the hardest life, in my opinion, of the series. Constantly be questioned about his allegiance and being called a coward, I can’t imagine how many times Snape just wanted to tell everyone what he was going through. I love his character. His story was a great twist in the plot of the Harry Potter series.
My feelings towards the Trio didn’t change all too much because I expected them to rise up the way they did. I knew they would face whatever they had to together, even with Ron’s little episode of absence. By the end of the series, I was so proud of them all and the journey they went through together. They have grown up so much within this series and it brings a tear to my eye that my friendship and journey with them has come to an end once again.
The Harry Potter series is already placed in a larger social context because of the fan base located around the world. Rowling made this world where people can live with magic, but still deal with death, love, friendship, trauma, empathy, and so much more. She made this world seem so real and relatable to the readers that it’s bringing people from all over our world together. There are hundreds of fan sites discussing the series/films and there’s even an amusement park now to make the Wizarding World appear even more realistic. Even though the series has come to an end, Harry Potter will stay in the hearts of the fans forever because that’s how big of a deal he and the Wizarding World are.
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Blog Post #3
This is my first time I am reading the series as well. I have to say that the fifth book is my least favorite. But this last book was extraordinary. And I knew Harry would live before I even read the book but did not know he died first then came back to life. Also for being my first time, it was a lot of information to keep track of and to have read in such a short amount of time. At the end of the series, it was sad that it was over. But it was rewarding to know how the information and connections all pulled together in the end. The little bits and pieces from the first books unified the 7th book. Over the series, you got to know Harry, Ron and Hermione so well, watched them grow into young adults which were precious in its own way. One powerful moment in the 7th book is when Neville kills Nagini, Lord Voldemort’s Snake. He kills her by the Gryffindor sword. It is very powerful because Neville starts out timid, shy and not confident at all but by the end of the 7th book he becomes this hero by killing one of the horcruxes. One problematic moment overall is that it is the first time you hear about the deathly hallows even though it plays a vital role in the 7th book. I know Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak is in all the books but they don’t reference anything from it or refer to the story at all. You don’t know it is one of the deathly hallows until the 7th book. So basically it was a surprise all of a sudden. There is some resolution in the end knowing that Snape was trustful overall and basically you receive a mind blowing confession of his loyalty in the 7th book. Throughout the books, Snape’s trust was always questioned by his evil ways. Originally, Dumbledore was made out to be this heroic wise old wizard that everybody trusts. Then you find out that he messed with dark arts and appeared to abandon his family for his own ambition. So he wasn’t as innocent as he was made out to be. But in the end from all the sacrifices he made from all the people he cared about, he was still a good person. The most prominent context is the coming of age theme which really reflects the adolescents in our society now. It is easy to relate to the feelings within the culture. The changing Harry, Ron and Hermione really reflect the real world growing up. The emotions and physical changes they go through reflect the culture and society today.
The End of An Era
The final chapter of the Harry Potter series was bittersweet. Not only because we learned what happened to Harry, Ron, Hermione and the others but because it meant that the end of an era. I began my journey with Harry Potter when I was in the third grade and it continued until the summer before my junior year of high school, college if the movies are included. Talk about a long-term relationship. It was a complex ending, however. The search for the horcruxes was exciting and I never knew what was going to happen. Even after it all came out and we knew that Snape was good after all, it was still hard to figure everything out. Just thinking about it now, I finally realized that it was Snape who sent the Patronus leading Harry to the Sword of Gryffindor. This was the second time I had read the entire series from start to finish. I definitely read things that I completely forgot about – the entire Winky/Imperiused Barty Crouch scenario, for example. I think overtime I’ve gotten so used to the movies that I forgot how complex and intricate the plots of the books are. One thing I always remembered, however, was the passing of the Elder Wand. When I was reading the last few chapters of Half-Blood Prince I knew what to expect and I carefully read the passage where Draco Malfoy disarms Dumbledore. It was so simple, just in one little, inconspicuous sentence, Rowling changes the plot entirely. Of course, you wouldn’t know that until you read the seventh book… One of the most poignant parts of the final book was when Harry is walking through the grounds towards the Forbidden Forest. He is under his cloak and is a silent observer of the scenes unfolding around him. He sees Ginny, taking care of a wounded classmate, informs Neville of the necessity of Nagini’s death. Harry’s thoughts are all centered around the idea that his life has to end so soon, “The long game was ended, the Snitch had been caught, it was time to leave the air…” (Deathly Hallows 698). It amazes me to think that this seventeen year old boy could sacrifice himself the way that Harry did. It wasn’t even that Harry knew he was going to die, everyone is going to die eventually. The amazing part is that he walks himself into the forest, he leads himself into death. Having said that, the whole scene was somewhat depressing, and still, as I read it, I knew Harry wouldn’t die. The first time I read the book, I had this feeling of disbelief. There’s no way Harry could die, it’s HIS story that we’re reading. How would the book go on without Harry at the story’s center? What would the point of this whole saga be if the hero died at the end? In the end, I was right and Harry lived. The scene where Harry is carried back into the castle by Hagrid is just as powerful as his walk into the forest. The story has come full circle. The man who saved baby Harry from the rubble of his home in Godric’s Hollow is now carrying the same boy into Hogwarts after being ‘killed’ by the same man who tried to murder him all those years ago. The whole chapter I was just waiting for Harry to spring back to life with an “AH-HA!” and when it finally happens, the subsequent duel is brilliant. Voldemort dies by his own Unforgivable Curse and Harry remains true to himself, only attempting to disarm Voldemort. This says something about Harry’s character. Despite all of the pain and suffering that Voldemort has caused Harry, it still does not make him powerful or angry enough to resort to murder.
I started to think less of Dumbledore through the course of the book. Not so much his experiments with the dark arts, but more so the little details that he didn’t tell Harry. I understood that Dumbledore left the Horcrux collecting more open-ended so that Harry, Ron and Hermione have to figure it out for themselves. The similarities between Dumbledore and Harry, however, especially regarding their residencies in Godric’s Hollow were details that the Headmaster really should’ve shared. There were some hints, however, that Dumbledore had also lost some close to him, although it is understandable that he never shared details with Harry. Although they were very close, some things shouldn’t be shared between a student and teacher.
In the end, the seventh book is one, if not the, most exciting installments of the series. When I got to the last few chapters, it was hard to put it down and work on other homework. Being able to discuss the books in class gave me new insight. It made me think of situations in a different light and also brought up things I hadn’t even considered. It’s sad to think that I can no longer read legitimately Harry Potter as opposed to doing other homework..
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
A Call to Arms and the Silence that Follows
The end of the series was a highly anticipated event. People flocked together to guess at the end of the series, fans developed intricate and complex theories in hopes of uncovering the clues, and friends and families planned extravagant pre-release parties. I was one that could fit into all these categories. The experience of the pre-release mania was something I will always cherish. I was hooked onto the series and emotionally attached to all its characters. I felt a sense of anticipation and a sense of foreboding about the end, but when I finally received my copy of the book and reached the end, I was extremely content with the end.
As I read the last book, a few scenes in particular stuck out to me: Harry’s use of the Resurrection Stone and Harry being carried back to the castle by Hagrid. The Resurrection Stone allowed Harry to see his mom, dad, Sirius and Lupin before he himself walked into the forest where he was sure to meet his death. That scene had such emotional depth. Harry’s lost ones were able to reconvene with him to give him the strength to meet a fate e feared. It was beautifully written and emotionally captivating. It might be my favorite scene within the entire series. Shortly after, we were given the passage where Harry feigns his death and is carried back to Hogwarts by Hagrid the Giant. Though Rowling employed a sense of dramatic irony, the passage was enthralling nonetheless. The reactions to those back at the castle were debilitating and painfully accurate. I firmly believe that the shrill shriek heard as they approached was from McGonagall. I really hope that the movie makers are able to perfectly capture the depth and power of these two scenes.
These two scenes were so powerful for me because I had that emotional attachment to the Trio. The Trio and the Weasley family were the characters I focused on throughout Rowling’s epic. With that said, the whole ordeal with Snape was not as compelling for me. I appreciated all the work and thought Rowling put into the character, but the question as to what his loyalties were was not are prevalent for me. I just simply saw it as another part of the story, one that supported the plot. So, when the time came, the revelation of Snape’s history was not as engaging for me. However, the revelation of Dumbledore’s past was. Throughout the series, Dumbledore is portrayed as a living paragon of perfection, and it’s his past that humanizes him. We see Dumbledore engage in prejudice and discriminatory acts and tendencies, we are exposed to his fear of death and the means he sought to escape it, and we are given a glimpse into his dysfunctional family. Simply, we get to see the man’s flaws. Despite his brilliance and wise nature, Dumbledore was revealed to be a man and not a god. I found this to be very potent for me.
On a larger scale, apart from myself, I know that people were disappointed with the deaths that came from the final battle. Others were upset with the Epilogue chapter at the end of the novel. But if we look past these minute details, I believe that the last book and the series as a whole was positively received by the public. Despite the bumpy beginnings with conservatives Christians banning their children from reading the books, the series ended on a universal note that helped remove that discomfort with the series. It is simple: Good triumphs over Evil. With that said, I know many of my friends who were finally allowed to read the novels because that simple, yet grand, theme came to fruition. In addition, millions of people found ways to relate to the Potter books, and because of that, they have found their way into the lives of all those people and thusly our culture. It would be difficult to find someone who has never heard of the series. And for that, I believe that the series has found a lasting place in our current culture and society.
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Blog Post #3
I read the series for the first time in this class. Some of the books were better than others, yet Rowling wrote these books in a way that I could not put them down. Especially this last book! I am so glad that I read all of these books because I finally understand what the big deal is about Harry Potter. I was completely shocked at the ending of the book because I had heard rumors that Harry Potter died. After reading, I know that Harry was the one who in fact lived. He continued to be the “boy who lived” and his love for others and his willingness to sacrifice himself kept him alive, which was something I never expected. Rowling used so many twists and turns throughout the series, which lead people wanting more. I think that Rowling expresses friendship and determination in this last book so well, that it allows society to relate to her stories when they read. I think however, death should not have been so prominent in this last book. I think it is very dark for children who are younger to be reading about it. I also think that it gave readers some excitement and it showed readers how far the characters were willing to go to protect Harry’s life and show determination to stand up for something you believe in. Harry, Ron, and Hermione’s friendship strengthened throughout this series and while you saw moments that tested their friendship, you always knew that they would stick together. They were always willing to help one another, whether they were mad at each other, or didn’t believe in what they were doing.
My feelings towards Dumbledore never changed throughout the series. I always had this feeling that Dumbledore was on Harry’s side. I always believed that he never gave Harry a task that he couldn’t handle. I hated hearing Dumbledore’s past from different people, because I felt like it wasn’t true. Even though Dumbledore failed to inform Harry of major important things in the wizarding world, he had enough faith in Harry to complete the tasks. However, my feeling towards Snape was kind of a rollercoaster. I had times when I liked him and times I didn’t like him, which is what I think Rowling wanted. Snape was a mysterious character who had two sides to him. He had one side who hated Harry with a burning passion and it only got worse throughout the seven years at Hogwarts. However, we knew he had a good side too. I just had a feeling that Snape was out to get Harry and I thought that if Voldemort wouldn’t have kept trying to kill Harry, then Snape would have.
I think that this series could be viewed in any social context. It is so flexible and can relate to so many themes like coming of age, prejudice, friendship, death, oppression, love and the list can go on. It is easy to relate to and you can pretty much fit the context into any sub category you want.
Blog Post 3
My view of Dumbledore didn't chnage much. I thought Dumbledore had everything worked out before he died, but my view of Snape changed. I figured he had to be good because Dumbledore continued to trust him and also how Harry always thought Snape was up to something but he never was. Although, the part about the only reason he was on Dumbledore's side was because he loved Lily was a surprise to me. I think Snape found the one person he loved more than anything and he would do anything for her like betray one of the most powerful wizards at the time. I also think Snape had to have a lot of courage and that his love for Lily had to be strong enough that he would betray Voldemort and live a life of deceit and solitary for so long. As for my views of Harry, they didn't change much. Ithink he finally came of age regarding that theme. He was finally able to accept he had to die, but I think he knew he would have to die all along. He finally realized he had to die in order to protect his friends. Ron and Hermione, I think also had to have a strong love for their families and friends to risk their lives throughout the seventh book to try and defeat Voldemort.
I also think the series applies to our society. It has many important themes that apply to children and adults. The idea of racism and how it plays an important role in the series through the discrimination based on blood. Rowling also shows that these ways can be changed. Draco and his mother consistently discriminate based on blood throughout the series. Yet, Draco is unable to kill Dumbledore and Narcissa reports that Harry is dead when she knows he isn't just so she can see her son again. Rowling shows that even in today's culture, we can change and become more accepting and stop racism.