May 30, 2015 11:07
wizarding psychology,
love potions,
slytherins,
author: sweettalkeress,
merope gaunt,
dark magic,
albus dumbledore,
gender,
hbp,
bigotry,
purebloods,
broken aesop,
resurrection stone,
family,
wizard/muggle relations,
abridged: hbp,
abridged,
humor,
morality
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Comments 4
I feel Rowling was kind of lazy in a lot of Dumbledore's expositions and we're just expected to blindly trust him cause he's Dumbledore and he knows everything (like Harry does, I guess).
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Or if his dad worked for the Ministry. Too bad the connections he tries to call on are Slytherin, and are therefore demonstrative of corruption, nepotism and prejudice, unlike when Gryffindors promote each other and their families. That's just blood telling, but in a good way.
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And of the Ministry officials. Because why would they need to go back to help an impoverished and abused teenage girl or check to see how she was doing? Now that her father and brother are gone, surely everything will work out. In fairness to Rowling and the officials, I think this is historically accurate. We're talking about the early 1920s here. My mother is about 14 months older than Tom Jr. She has assured me there were NO government-run social welfare programs during the '20s and '30s. Granted, we're American, but even in Britain, they didn't have socialized medicine until after WW II. I've looked for info on when their other social programs started but couldn't find anything. As my mother has said, "There was no therapy back then. Oh, once in a while, you'd hear about some rich person getting Freudian psychoanalysis, but other than that, if you had mental or emotional problems, you got better, or you got worse, or you died." She also says, "If your parents beat you back then, they ( ... )
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