Subject: re: 5.12 Harry Potter and the Vicious Mockery
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Posted on: 2024-04-03 02:50:45 UTC

What a shock, Umbridge was harping on Draco for his hair and gender performance last chapter, and now McLaggen and a bunch of other students are calling him a girl. Almost like modeling bad behavior to young people makes them internalize that it’s an acceptable thing to do or something, what a shock, who could have foreseen this? McLaggen is being vile in this chapter, and frankly, I’m glad he got socked. It may not have been the right thing to do on Harry’s end, but bullies need to learn they can’t just torment other with impunity. (Frankly, any and all nearby Hogwarts staff should have intervened after the singing started and forced the students to stop, in the name of respectful sportsmanship.)

I’m thinking about Hermione’s rather random detention with Bonnefoy, and wondering . . . did she produce that cursed rune, rather than Draco? (Don’t answer that.)

I . . . wow. I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised by Umbridge being racist/anti-immigrant against Liu, but it kind of did catch me off guard? I guess I assumed his status as coming from the equivalent of a Noble and Most Ancient House would ingratiate him to Umbridge well enough, but clearly that isn’t enough to bypass her level of prejudice . . . And on a more general note, with the enmity between school houses going on, and Harry’s argument with Ron at the end, it feels like Umbridge is having the opposite effect that she did in canon; instead of most of the school uniting against her strict rules, she’s successfully dividing the students from each other. The ruling class does love to dismantle solidarity . . .

Oh dear, I spy a Vanishing Cabinet, hopefully not filled with foreshadowing for year six in this timeline . . .

I have major respect for Draco here. Even with all the drama and insult that happened in this chapter, he’s still able to articulate clearly to Harry why his responsibilities to his family still matter to him, despite his lack of faith in Mother Magic, and how Harry’s inability to respect that is hurting Draco. I still don’t want him to marry Astoria, of course, but he’s keeping his head above water and making his priorities clear in the midst of all the turmoil going on around them. He's quite a kid, has a good head on his shoulders!

—doctorlit has never felt so much solidarity with Peeves as when hearing him refer to Quidditch as “sportsball”

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