Subject: There's some crossover there.
Author:
Posted on: 2016-05-20 13:36:00 UTC
A lot of the stuff about multicultural wizarding America could still be absolutely true - but MACUSA doesn't talk about it in the officially published history. I wrote a very short story from the perspective of one of the (hypothetical) culturo-magic groups the New York wizards don't like to think about.
This assumption doesn't cover everything, but it fills in a lot of it - particularly when you view the History as being written by MACUSA. Why don't they talk about their predecessors' American patriotism? Because they're desperately trying to instill the current generation with the mindset that MACUSA Is All.
A couple specific points:
-There was a lot of thought way back that the entirety of North America would eventually join the US. MACUSA probably took that to conclusions and claims authority over the entire continent.
-House names! I agree that an American school probably shouldn't look like Hogwarts, but disagree about 'uninspired'. It's far more interesting than the three house systems I've personally experienced:
-My secondary school had houses named after the three founders of the schools it was made up of. Not terribly imaginative, given that two of them were named in the name of the school.
-My primary school had Diamond, Ruby, Emerald, and Sapphire. Thrilling, no? (Diamond was best.)
-My son's school has Oxford, Cambridge, Bath, and... I dunno, probably Milton Keynes or somewhere equally banal. No, they have no connection to any of those universities.
The Hogwarts idea of houses that a) people care about, and b) have actual distinguishing features is either a very weird one, or a very Upper Class Public School one.
hS