I really do. But here's something to contemplate.
Example...storming off into the ministry. HP got played like a drum. His stupid, foolish action to run off to the ministry with a bunch of the other students was so so dumb. It got several of his friends seriously hurt, destroyed valuable resources (time turners come to mind), and got Sirius killed. And yes, every bit of that was HP's fault. He was told *specifically* to close his Voldy-like down...yet he didn't. The fact that it helped to save the life of Aurther Weasley doesn't offset the fact that it did more damage than good.
~Jeordam
Example...storming off into the ministry. HP got played like a drum. His stupid, foolish action to run off to the ministry with a bunch of the other students was so so dumb. It got several of his friends seriously hurt, destroyed valuable resources (time turners come to mind), and got Sirius killed. And yes, every bit of that was HP's fault. He was told *specifically* to close his Voldy-like down...yet he didn't. The fact that it helped to save the life of Aurther Weasley doesn't offset the fact that it did more damage than good.
~Jeordam
Rowling was, I think, trying to show the cost of thoughtless action, and the absurdity of blind, logic-less heroism. Hermione even points out that Harry has just no way of knowing what's going on, that he let his emotions take over too often, etc.
Her point has never been that kids can know everything and can handle everything.
That's right.
That's why I find it reductive and a bit too easy when people accuse Rowling of promoting the rejection of parental and authority figures wholesale. She rather promotes to kids freedom of thought an the right to question authority rather than blind obedience to everything. "Always, you need to think, then think over again". But her "rebels" and free thinkers don't get off so easy, especially Harry - and Sirius who, while sympathetic, was also depicted as an immature man who's refused to grow up past his teenage years and who enables teenagers in turn to justify taking harsh, badly thought-out and costly actions. Part of her message is that freedom of choice comes with high responsabilities and a necessity to accept to mature, especially when dangers are involved. She rewarded Harry for stepping up and taking the job of teacher responsibly when adults gave up on their duties, but in the same book she made him pay very dearly at the end for rebelling wholesale against authority without questionning his reasons anymore, letting emotions get the better of him and rejecting for once sound advice.
Harry's harsher and stupider actions come to balance out all those instances in the books where Rowling appeared to promote rebellion and disobedience without nuances. She was even a bit devious at it, because she let the kids get away with it for a while, let adults absorb most of the consequences for them, and even let the kids make an habit of not listening before the pendulum suddenly swung back and smacked them right where it hurt the most (death of Sirius and so on).
Where Rowling "sinned" a bit and lacked balance is in her portrayal of the moral/social right (and she threw in the rich an powerful without much distinction, for good measure). Her portrayal of conservative people is on the whole black, black and black. She depicted virtually all of them as intolerant (and that's mild... by the end "intolerant" becomes more and more racist and for some genocidal), stupid when not evil themselves or the enablers and helpers of all evil. For a few, the only barely redeeming quality was that they loved their children too. On the other hand, the poor and liberal-minded (and her more out-there bunch of eccentrics verging on a little outdated hippy values) were depicted in general very positively - a bit on the naive side or foolish at times, but their values and human qualities always redeemed their flaws in the end. It's rather telling that Harry Potter was criticized or looked at with much suspicion in the more conservative milieus (large chunks of the US, the churches worlwide etc.), while the socially liberal nations/groups/people often wondered what was so terrible and wrong about those books.
It's not black-and-white. For people who agree with her values, JKR's books have quite a bit of food for thought for children while being damn good stories and an excellent incentive to read. In all honesty, this should come with some discussion with the kids afterward to address a few of the topics she painted a little too much in black and white. For people who don't agree with her values, their reservations are quite understandable, especially when by the end of the series, the more conservative are quiote justified to think their values have been largely ridiculed and more than once associated with evil (though as usual the extremists on both sides went over the top, like with those moronic accusations that Rowling "promoted" witchcraft among kids or taught "atheism" and anti-Christian values... the deeply christian values and symbolism in her final book made them look more than a little foolish in retrospect.)
Harry Potter (the entire series)
06/04/2010 11:00:07 PM
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Re: Harry Potter (the entire series)
06/04/2010 11:29:49 PM
- 981 Views
Really?
07/04/2010 05:41:46 PM
- 1018 Views
I honestly think it's a combination of the two
07/04/2010 05:55:18 PM
- 906 Views
I'll give you that....
07/04/2010 06:11:27 PM
- 926 Views
It does seem logical that the series gets more teenager-oriented as Harry grows older.
07/04/2010 06:47:57 PM
- 931 Views
Re: Harry Potter (the entire series)
07/04/2010 12:26:22 AM
- 1238 Views
I get where you're coming from
07/04/2010 06:19:13 PM
- 1027 Views
That's kind of the point though...
07/04/2010 08:44:26 PM
- 970 Views
This is how I see it too
08/04/2010 12:43:03 AM
- 1085 Views
just a comment about your rich=bad
08/04/2010 02:05:32 AM
- 1039 Views
I agree with many of your points.
07/04/2010 12:44:31 AM
- 1133 Views
I have to dispute the concept of going "too far."
07/04/2010 06:32:47 AM
- 886 Views
Hm, I don't know.
07/04/2010 11:08:12 AM
- 971 Views
This is a lot like the argument I'm having with Joel on the CMB concerning original sin.
08/04/2010 07:21:39 AM
- 878 Views
Where is this debate? I'd like to read it.
08/04/2010 05:18:38 PM
- 1537 Views
I should have put "debate" in quotes. It's about four sentences long.
08/04/2010 10:32:43 PM
- 875 Views
More conversation on Snape.
07/04/2010 06:01:37 PM
- 1183 Views
His death wasn't very spectacular, but he did play an essential role...
07/04/2010 06:45:58 PM
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Brief comments on Magic, Dumbledore, and The Epilogue.
07/04/2010 07:13:55 AM
- 1227 Views
Re: Brief comments on Magic, Dumbledore, and The Epilogue.
07/04/2010 06:09:20 PM
- 1078 Views
The movies are even worse about this.
07/04/2010 06:15:35 PM
- 958 Views
Death doesn't actually happen in slow-motion fit for the cinema screen.
08/04/2010 07:24:31 AM
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Re: Death doesn't actually happen in slow-motion fit for the cinema screen.
08/04/2010 03:27:09 PM
- 940 Views
Harry Potter and Star Wars have two radically different approaches to this
07/04/2010 06:13:25 PM
- 1143 Views
When my son asked for his own set of Harry Potter books,
07/04/2010 10:26:37 PM
- 978 Views
This is assuming of course...
07/04/2010 11:00:15 PM
- 1032 Views
I was most irritated by the ironic names
08/04/2010 05:38:59 AM
- 1057 Views
Re: I was most irritated by the ironic names
08/04/2010 10:07:40 PM
- 1339 Views
Exactly - it's not as obvious if you're a kid, then it seems clever and it's fun to decode.
09/04/2010 01:04:11 AM
- 1008 Views