fpb

(Untitled)

Aug 22, 2008 20:24

The trouble with most Snape fics is that they are not about Snape, but about Alan Rickman. And they are all by straight women.

snape, harry potter, snark unleashed

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Re: Eh-hem..... fpb August 25 2008, 08:01:01 UTC
To be ambitious and cunning does not mean to be evil unless you exercise your cunning in evil ways, or else fathers of our nation like Washington, de Gaulle or Cavour would have to count as villains. Of course, some such people definitely are villainous - Vittorio Emanuele II, Bismarck and Richelieu come to mind. But another question I had was about JKR's neurotic fear and hatred of politics and administration, and her replacement of patriotism with provinciality. I suspect this has to do with her downgrading of "ambition". Indeed, in Slytherin House as she depicts it, ambition seems to have morphed into its very reverse - conformity, bootlicking and a complete lack of individuality. This may, of course, be the shape that ambition takes in a society dominated by various immovable bureaucracies, but it is a mean and diminished version of what ambition really means. I hope you are ambitious in your goals, and I certainly am in mine. That is nothing to be ashamed of.

To be fair, there are several scenes in which the Slytherins are presented - in closing banquets and the like - as a whole house, and in every one of these, except for the final one (the gathering of the houses as the Battle of Hogwarts is about to take place), Draco Malfoy and his followers are shown to be a minority among the Slytherins. It is only "some" of the Slytherins, for instance, who refuse to drink to Cedric's memory and Harry's courage at the end of Goblet of Fire. And it is possible to say that the Slytherins were simply overcome by events - by Pansy Parkinson's contemptible display, Minerva McGonagall's burst of anger, everyone else's immediate condemnation; that they allowed themselves to be shepherded out of the building; and that then many of them came back along with their Housemaster and the people of Hogsmeade, in the rescuing force that drove the Death Eaters into the building. This is a possible reading, and I used to rely on it a lot. But the thing is, JKR has not supported it - to the best of my knowledge - and so the situation is that, to the best of our knowledge, only three Slytherins - Snape, Regulus and Slughorn - have in fact taken the side of the light in earnest, with three more - the Malfoys - breaking away from Voldemort when his dislike for them became obvious, without for that reason doing anything to help the Light. Not, as things stand, a tidy budget.

Incidentally, I would disagree that it was "only" love for Lily that made Snape abandon the dark. Lily was rather the embodyment of everything that held him away from becoming a Carrow or a Malfoy; and JKR shows Dumbledore's judgment of him shifting from contempt to complete trust and even dependency. When Dumbledore thought, as you do, that Snape had only broken with Voldemort because of Lily, he treated him with abruptness and contempt; after a few years getting to know him, he had every confidence that, whatever happened, Snape would not abandon the right side. This is about more than one beautiful redhead.

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