Subject: A response in triplicate.
Author:
Posted on: 2016-03-11 07:36:00 UTC

a) I'm not sure what you're referring to here. Skin-walkers? What she says is that they exist (as Animagi) and that rumours built up about them, mostly among the colonials. Wikipedia claims that the Navajo version (it's not clear on whether there are others) is viewed as wildly evil. (I'll also observe that in the Dresden Files, skinwalkers are amoral psychopathic shapeshifters who can barely be killed; JKR is being far nicer about it than most.)

b) Particularly gifted != only good at. Wand-using wizards are implied to be 'particularly gifted at' Charms and Transfiguration - but that doesn't mean Harry Potter can't be spectacularly good at other things, too.

c) I think it's pretty clear that these narratives are from the viewpoint of a near-present Colonial American. The Natives drop off the page as soon as Europeans start to do things, there's absolutely no mention of the enslaved African wizards who were almost certainly there, and the very dubious decisions of the magical government (see: part 3) are accepted at face-value. So it's actually the narrator saying 'oh, yeah, Native magic is identical to ours, except they suck at most of it'.

Someone - oh, yep, it was firemagic again - pointed out that Animagi in particular must be (at least slightly) different among the Native American peoples - because they don't have access to the required mandrake leaves.

hS

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