This thread turned out to be so interesting, it's gotten me thinking even more about incest in literature and what it stands for. Unfortunately I really haven't read any lit crit on the subject. I have a feeling I'll be surfing around today looking for some. The weird thing, too, is that the subject seems to tie in with other recent subjects on
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Sirius himself was destroyed by circumstance and his family turned against him, but what about Purebloods like Draco who are clearly part of the fold? He could be destroyed like Regulus, but it would be nice to just have him learn something. He doesn't yet seem insane, and if he's dating Pansy Parkinson well, she's not the nicest girl but she doesn't seem to be his first cousin either.;-) She always strikes me as someone who's from a good family whose bloodline just doesn't go back as far back as the Blacks or the Malfoys. There's no mention of Parkinson Death Eaters either. I don't see any particular storyline with this as I don't know how much page space would be devoted to something like that, but it seems like this last book took the issue of family very seriously, with different characters either trying to get away from their families (and ending badly) or rehabilitate them (Hagrid with Grawp, which was more ambiguous). Sirius and his mother seemed to only be capable of yelling at each other from extreme points of view. I wonder if Narcissa will prove the savior of her own family line in some way.
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I really, really hope that JKR does something interesting with Draco though, instead of keeping him as he is, because he's just two dimensional for me. I'm hoping that the Lucius imprisonment thing will either bring him out as a villain with a motive, or that it will lead to some kind of redemption for him. Either way, I can see the bond of family becoming more important here.
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I do hope there's something interesting done with him, though I'm not holding my breath. Obviously his family interests me so I'd like to see it standing strong (if battered) in the end, but that doesn't mean the author sees it that way.
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