Rowling's Pottermore Notes

Sep 15, 2011 14:04

I'm not a member of Pottermore, so I'm glad that some bloggers have been collecting Rowling's notes from the site. The notes don't have that many surprises, but a few things did jump out at me.

Spoilers Ahead, Obviously )

pottermore, sorting hat, hogwarts houses, mcgonagall, history, quirrell

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harpsi_fizz September 15 2011, 19:28:44 UTC

AHEM.

I think that it's JK who made the mistake, not the sorting hat. A person can be ambitious and cunning, but be selfless.
A person can be brave, but cowardly at times.
There isn't only one type of smart.
Hufflepuffs are also loyal and fair, which have no bearing on laziness. In fact, a flunking Ravenclaw could be lazy.

She's just now realizing how many "Slytherpuffs" and "Ravendors" there are, and that people don't just fall perfectly into four categories. If she'd back off of her universe a little bit and just say "the hat puts you where you'll do best, and nobody is good or evil" then there'd be no problem.

Again, Jo, very creative, entertaining writer, but you ruin it when you grip your darlings too tightly and refuse to admit your own fault. Nobody's going to hate you for saying you made a mistake/weren't clear/thought better of it on careful examination. Just own up.

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danajsparks September 15 2011, 20:10:34 UTC
Absolutely. You can be ambitious in your desire to make the world better, like wanting to end hunger or homelessness. You might be fine speaking in front of hundreds or thousands of people yet terrified of riding roller coasters. And some of the most creative people ever were poor students.

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oryx_leucoryx September 15 2011, 20:45:40 UTC
Also, there are brave people on both sides of any conflict. One can be brave in the name of an evil cause (see Bellatrix). Bravery does not in its own make one a good person nor one who by necessity makes the world better.

Similarly, once can be loyal to a group who is doing evil.

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harpsi_fizz September 15 2011, 21:38:49 UTC
DAMN! Until you said that, I didn't realize how damned intwined bravery and goodness were in my head! But yeah... I guess so. If bravery and goodness were a package deal, then there would be no evil because the evil would be too cowardly to come out and make bad stuff happen.

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oryx_leucoryx September 15 2011, 21:49:13 UTC
I suppose there is some negatively-colored word to describe the daring and self-sacrificing people of the 'other side'. But whichever it is, 'they' use it for 'our' brave people. Whoever 'we' and 'they' might be.

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danajsparks September 16 2011, 00:02:45 UTC
----I suppose there is some negatively-colored word to describe the daring and self-sacrificing people of the 'other side'

Terrorists?

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harpsi_fizz September 21 2011, 18:10:59 UTC
*Remembers Blackadder, all of 'em*

Let's pretend that JK was trying to do some subtle Brit humor in that style and her idiot fans were the ones that took it too far.

And Re: Danny_Sparks' comment... yeah, actually. I remember two DJs from New York were even speculating one day on their talk show about that. Ron Bennington, he said "What if I'm wrong and it's Bin Laden's God that's the real one? I don't know. Nobody does."

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harpsi_fizz September 15 2011, 21:32:42 UTC
So damned true.
I don't wanna be "that fan" who looks into things too closely and speculates and makes assumptions about the author's beliefs and overcomplicates/runs things, but being "smart" ought to be more than being good at learning in the sit-down-and-listen way. Just about everyone proves himself/herself to be brilliant learners if they're presented with the material in the right way. Like audio learners, tactile learners, visual learners ( ... )

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sweettalkeress September 21 2011, 00:57:44 UTC
"A person can be ambitious and cunning, but be selfless."

And then there's people like the villain from the fourth-generation Pokemon games (a textbook Slytherin), who honestly thought he was being caring and selfless but made tons of trouble for everyone.

This was touched upon in a previous post, where someone suggested that Rowling isn't smart enough to understand or write about true cunning, so she just makes her "cunning" characters more selfish than the standard to compensate.

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harpsi_fizz September 21 2011, 17:56:46 UTC
Are you talking about Team Aqua or another team? I know Team Aqua is trying to awaken a (Kraken-like Pokemon? Cthulhu?), and I'm not sure why they're doing it, but it probably isn't because they're trying to destroy the world. Yanno, 'cause... if you're gonna destroy the world, you'd better have a place to stand, right?

*Absolutely arbitrary direction* There really is no truly evil human being, as someone in a previous post said. Nobody thinks themselves "evil", even in H.P's world. Even the worshipers of the arguably most sinister God (and my personal favorite) Cynothoglys, the Mortician God... all summoning her does is bring her, "a shapeless, multiform entity with a single arm used for catching those who summoned it and bringing them painless, ecstatic death." That's not hurting anyone.

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sweettalkeress September 21 2011, 19:15:10 UTC
Actually, I'm talking about the leader of Team Galactic. Team Aqua (along with their counterpart Team Magma) is from a different generation entirely. What Team Galactic's leader Cyrus wants is to destroy the universe and rebuild it again from scratch, but that's because he honestly thinks that in doing so he could remove the problems that plague the world.

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charlottehywd September 21 2011, 01:55:46 UTC
Wow, nice distinction there. The "ambitious, cunning, yet selfless" thing makes me think of that famous Bible passage about being as wise as serpents, yet as innocent as doves. Was that sort of what you were thinking of?

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harpsi_fizz September 21 2011, 18:03:14 UTC
I wasn't, though that would be a very appropriate passage. I was mostly just thinking about how unfair it is to just pigeonhole someone. (Made a Gaia thread about it and got some beautiful testimonials, including those from self-identified Gryffindors who were annoyed with the favoritism).

It's just very interesting that a woman who, when she wrote these books, had been on welfare and struggling. You'd think she'd think a little bit more about grouping people together and resigning yourself to how they're "just going to turn out".

But for our own sanity, let's just say that she realized that people were stupid and wanted things in absolutes and so she was just giving the half-thinking masses what they wanted.

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