Subject: re:5.13 Harry Potter and the Fact I Haven't Been Putting "Lord" in Front of His Name This Whole Time
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Posted on: 2024-04-08 19:30:13 UTC

“. . . the school’s tendency to read romantic interest into even the most innocuous of things.” I can’t remember if I commented on this in an earlier year or not, but yeah. Raising children with this overemphasis on romantic pair-ups leads them to view every aspect of life through a romantic lens. It’s unhealthy in so many ways! It can lead to Draco’s situation, where he feels so obligated to seek a Bond that it affects his ability to form natural, casual relationships; it can lead to the misinterpretations with Harry and Hermione in first year, leading to teasing and public embarrassment; it can erasure of nonnormative relationships, like Liu/Jacques/Jenni’s, as well as of ace/aro folks choosing to abstain from relationships; and it can lead people to deemphasize other aspects of life, like schoolwork and social progress. Good thing we don’t see an overemphasis on romantic relationships in real world media, leading other types of relationships to get viewed as lesser by comparison! . . . >_>

Speaking of the real world, I see Umbridge has reached the “we need to segregate board games because girls like me are too dumb to compete with boys” stage of self-hurting TERFy feminism! Good for her, I’m sure all her female friends and relatives are so proud of her achievement. On the emotionally opposite end of chess, I adore the scene you wrote of Luna and Ginny playing Fanfiction Chess against each other. I was only able to read it in chunks, because I kept having to stop and laugh! “My king is full of hubris,” indeed. Also loved the quote from Qiu’s (dad/grandpa?) that “. . . winning distracts you from playing the game . . . rankings and prizes will only distract you from what you need to be doing . . .” Aside from being objectively true, this also has a tie with real world transphobia, and the accusation that kids are transitioning “just to win a medal.” Kids just want to have fun with each other; it’s the parents who are being weird about who gets the medal!

Qiu is such a well-written character, you’ve made her into such a supportive figure for Harry! Maybe it’s just that I haven’t read canon in so long, but my impression of Cho is that she was yet another schoolgirl character that doesn’t rise up to Rowling’s exacting standards of Good Female, and gets treated awfully by the narrative as a result. I like that Qiu is still clearly and understandably heartbroken over Cedric, but it isn’t turning into her only personality trait, and she can still have functional conversations with Harry about other topics, even doing her best to offer him advice, rather than needing him as an emotional crutch.

Oh look, overt, on-page proof that amab mages can absolutely store magic in their hair! Almost as though the insistence that witches exist to be magic banks for their husbands to withdraw power from is socially constructed or something, weird!

Ha ha, get cupboarded, idiot! See you in like five chapters, Cormac!

Aaaaaaaaaaah at last, the title gets referenced! I’ve been wondering of the title’s significance all year. I was expecting it to be some misogynistic old Avalonian fable (“Did you ever hear the Tragedy of Lady Polixenes the Wise?”), but it seems the lady is someone a bit more contemporary to out heroes! An antiauthoritarian someone, who places value on education and free reading materials, and doesn’t respect the social privileges of the Circle. Someone who’s willing to spend time doing further writing work after their homework is finished. Anyway, can’t wait to read the next chapter of “Lord Harry Potter and the Whispers of Hermione Granger.” Bye!

—doctorlit learned the slang word “skint” today

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