Thursday, October 10, 2019
Gender Roles in Harry Potter
Girls in young adult fantasy novels tend to fare rather poorly, especially in the light of Susan from the Chronicles of Narnia. Whenà Aslanà admits theà Pevensiesà into paradise, Susan is barred because she has forgotten Narnia and is more interested in stockings and the real adult world, because she has dared to want to grow up. Jill Pole comments: aâ⠬? Sheââ¬â¢s interested in nothing nowadays except nylons and lipstick and invitationsaâ⠬? 1. C. S. Lewis presents a conservative view of girls in the fantasy genre, that they will be drawn into their own adolescent fantasies and will abandon the secondary world.Philip Pullman compounds this with his treatment of Lyra in the His Dark Materials trilogy where she is the protagonist in the first novel but cedes decision making and power to Will through the remaining narrative. Hermione Granger starts out challenging this conservative view but ultimately she is turned into a mother and sidelined from the world of action . Her role changes through the novel and this is not due merely to the maturation of the character as she ages but also the needs of the male dominated groups around her, from the school group with Harry and Ron to the Order of the Phoenix.A quick glance offers the view that between 11 and 15 she is more rebellious whilst between the ages of 16 and 17 she takes on a sisterly role before her final appearance as a mother. In the Harry Potter novelsà Hermioneà is variously a bookish individual who supports and guides Harry through her research and work. She is the dominant force in Harryaâ⠬â⠢s success until the sixth novel,à Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince, where her role as Harryaâ⠬â⠢s educator is taken byà Dumbledore. Elizaà Dresangà sees Hermione as being far more successful than she is made out to be byà Farahà Mendlesohn.Hermione gains agency and is able to take more control of her situation thanà Mendlesohnà gives her credit for thro ugh her own actions, finding aâ⠬? evidence in the text to be considerably more optimistic about Hermioneââ¬â¢s self-determination than does Mendlesohnaâ⠬? 2à through her determination about being sorted by the Hat and aâ⠬? refuses to be deterred from her purposes, whether it be learning, admonishing about rules or â⬠¦ championing the underdogaâ⠬? 3. Mendlesohn comments that aâ⠬? Hermione is accepted in the social structure of the school only because she is Harryââ¬â¢s friendaâ⠬? à and that aâ⠬? [r]adicalism, as embodied by Hermione, is irrational, ignorant, and essentially transientaâ⠬? 5. Though her attempts at freeing the house-elves are doomed, she is more successful at galvanising her peers and enabling Harryââ¬â¢s success through her contributions. There is another issue to consider though and that is one of genre. The first five Harry Potter books are clearly school stories. Motifs, such as the annual arrival via the ste am train and the term times with the enforced stay over Christmas, come from this genre.Instead of only competing in sports for honour such as Quidditch, house points are awarded or taken away for behaviour or acts of bravery. In the final two novels, the structure of the novels change to being a more conventional fantasy series wherein Harry must defeatà Voldemort in a final conflict. This switch to the fantastic, in particular a male dominated fantastic world, means that Hermione must change roles to remain in the world since we rarely see any lone witches who have not turned to Voldemort such as Bellatrix Lestrange. This change of genre changes the expectations placed on the characters by readers and the roles which they play.School stories, in the mould of Enid Blytonââ¬â¢sà Maloryà Towers orà St Clareââ¬â¢s,à offerà the reader a tale of a group of children who go on adventures limited in scale by location, an isolated school, and time, terms end and the year i s punctuated by holidays. They offer a degree ofà carnivalesqueà expressed in the capers of the students which are tamed by the teachers but also a continuing discourse of maturation and acculturation to the wider adult world which must be entered. Parents exist at the edge of the story, referred to in letters or bringing their children to school.Once the anarchic time at school comes to an end, the parents represent the roles that the children will adopt. The fantastic world that Rowling constructs is one which begins as potentially subversive with Hermione challenging perceived wrongs and gaining a more powerful agency in the world through her knowledge. As she matures, the world is fully extended past Hogwarts and becomes deeply conservative and male dominated and Hermione has to re-ascertain her social standing on the edge of the group, her enabling agency now of no direct use to Harry.Hermione matures in the series changing from the shy, bookish outsider to being, in effect , a big sister character to Harry and Ron but at the cost of her own agency and talents. As she matures into this role, she changes from being an inquisitive person, pushing her own bounds of knowledge and even her sanity, to being slightly calmer but clearly not of equal standing with Ron and Harry who are allowed to take active roles into world. When we first meet Hermione on the train going toà Hogwarts, Rowling presents her an unkempt, exploring child unafraid to make new friends or to go up and visit the train driver.She is described as having aâ⠬? a bossy voice, lots of bushy brown hair and rather large front teethaâ⠬? (Harry Potter and the Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stone, p 79) and already wearing the school colours. She interrupts Ron and Harry who are tucking into a carriage way feast of sweets. Curious, she challenges Ron to show him the magic trick which he is attempting. As the train approaches the station, she encourages the two boys to don their robes and questi ons whether they have been fighting already. Her drive towards perfection is shown in her encyclopaedic knowledge of the school drawn from reading the history.Already knowing the reason for the enchanted ceiling, she attains a position in the newly formed social triumvirate as the knowledge repository. Hermione comes back from the school holidays a day early whilst the friends are trying to find out who Nicholasà Flamelà is and is aâ⠬? torn between the horror at the idea of Harry being out of bedâ⬠¦ and disappointment that he hadnââ¬â¢t at least found out who Nicholas Flamel wasaâ⠬? (Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stone,à p158). Her curiosity and good behaviour are at odds since she is aware that the answer may well lie in the forbidden section of the library but that entryà transgressesà the school rules.Although it is Harry who discovers Flamel by accident on the back of the collectorââ¬â¢s card he got on the train, it is Hermione who links him to the Philosoph erââ¬â¢s Stone through a book she got aâ⠬? out of the library weeks ago for a bit light reading aâ⠬? (Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stone, p. 161). Ronââ¬â¢s only comment, aâ⠬? Light? aâ⠬? (Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stone, p. 161), a suggestion that knowledge is not highly prized in Hogwarts as opposed toà Quidditch. It was Hermione who noticed that Fluffy was standing on the trapdoor (Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stone, p120), a fact that both Ron and Harry missed. Yet her achievements come at a social price.Hermioneââ¬â¢s adherence to the school rules is shown inPhilosopherââ¬â¢s Stoneà after the finding of the trapdoor at night. When Harry receives a new broom after the destruction of his old one, her comments aâ⠬? So I suppose you think thatââ¬â¢s a reward for breaking rules? aâ⠬? (Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stoneà p. 123). Her forthrightness about the midnight incident is tempered by the argument with Ron and Harry. She is clearly upset by their reaction which is made worse by Ronââ¬â¢s careless comment about her not having any friends. Rushing past Harry, he notices that she is crying (Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stoneà p. 127).When the troll is announced, both boys realise that it has gone to the girlsââ¬â¢ toilets where Hermione is trapped. When Professor McGonagall enters, Hermione lies to protect them all and claims that she wanted to tackle the troll herself. Although this means that aâ⠬? from that moment on, Hermione Granger became their friendaâ⠬? (Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stone, p. 132), she can only do so by lying to a teacher and so overturns her previous rigid adherence to rules. She has to adopt the boys own world view. Inà Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Hermione offers to make the Polyjuice Potion to see what Malfoy knows about the chamberââ¬â¢s opening.She tricksà Lockhartà into signing a slip for ââ¬ËMostà Potenteà Potionsââ¬â¢ to fool the Librarian (Chamber of Secrets, p. 124). Wh en Ron says that they will need to steal from Professor Snapeââ¬â¢s private stores, she retorts: aâ⠬? Well, if you two are going to chicken out, fineâ⬠¦Ã Ià donââ¬â¢t want to break the rules you know. aâ⠬? (Chamber of Secrets, p. 125). Hermione is aware that they have already obtained a permission slip that Lockhart has signed without realising what it is (using his own arrogance), that the recipe relies upon illicit goods and that the boys cannot discover Malfoyââ¬â¢s perceived role without trickery.Despite her protestations about the rules, she is aware that these will need to be broken to be successful. When they come to making the potion, the group need parts of their victims and Hermione is too hasty in taking some hair from Millicentà Bulstrodeà in Wrestling and accidentally turns herself into a cat much to Myrtleââ¬â¢s delight, aâ⠬? Wait till everyone finds out youââ¬â¢ve got aà tailaâ⠬? (Chamber of Secrets, p. 169). Whilst Ron and Harry have used her Sleeping Potion to knock outà Crabbeà andà Goyle, Malfoyââ¬â¢s henchmen, Hermioneââ¬â¢s own attempt has backfired and so she is unable to help get information from Malfoy.Her overachievement turns her into a figure of fun. Although she is able to assimilate Harry and Ronââ¬â¢s worldview into her own perceptions, she is unable to fully join their world although she is the enabler for their plans through the potion and the linking together of the clues inà Philosopherââ¬â¢s Stone. Her overachievement comes to a head in theà Harry Potter and the Prisoner ofà Azkabanà when she is given the use of the Time-Turner. In Snapeââ¬â¢s Potions class, Neville is aided by Hermione to perfect the Shrinking Solution but when Ron and Harry turn to challenge her after the deduction of points, she disappears only to reappear a few minutes ater with her bag falling apart through weight of books. When she brushes off Ronââ¬â¢s challenge about the contents, he muses aâ⠬? Do you get the feeling Hermioneââ¬â¢s not telling us something? aâ⠬? (Prisoner of Azkaban, p. 99). Clearly Hermione is unable to tell the boys about Professorà McGonagallââ¬â¢sà gift of the Time Turner. In the Defence against the Dark Arts exam, Hermione comes into contact with theà Boggartand after aâ⠬? a minute inside it [theà Boggart'sà trunk], she burst out again, screamingaâ⠬? (Prisoner of Azkaban, p. 234).The Boggart, which presents worst fears, has suggested to her that Professor McGonagall will fail her in an exam, so her fears of academic and also personal failure come to the fore. Ron is still inclined to laugh at Hermioneââ¬â¢s fear since he will not excel academically. Despite their close bond, Hermioneââ¬â¢s academic achievements have always separated her from the boys. It is only when the situation demands that time is altered that she is able to tell Harry. When they fail to saveBuckbeakà the first ti me,à Dumbledoreà suggests to Hermione that the situation can be saved by going backwards and Hermione confesses to Harry, aâ⠬?Iââ¬â¢ve been using it all year to get to all my lessonsaâ⠬? (Prisoner of Azkaban, p. 289) but she still cannot work out why Dumbledore has suggested going back three hours. It is up to Harry to formulate the plan to save theà Hippogriffà and Sirius. Once again, Hermioneââ¬â¢s mental achievements enable Harry but she is unable to complete the reasoning for the shift in time. Hermione proves herself via her academic prowess and enables Harry and Ron to complete various challenges. She is the person to whom the boys go when they have difficulties with the homework. Lupin praises herà as the aâ⠬? inest witch of her ageaâ⠬? (Prisoner of Azkaban, p 253)à in the Shrieking Shackà as she becomes hysterical at his perceived betrayal of her loyalty, aâ⠬? I didnââ¬â¢t tell anyoneâ⬠¦ Iââ¬â¢ve been covering up for you aâ⠬? (Prisoner of Azkaban, p 253). Her need to prove herself academically is challenged and Ronââ¬â¢s reaction is to want to laugh. Despite her achievement and regular help for Harry and Ron, it is only the teachers who really prize her accomplishments. She is the character most likely to fail through overachievement. Her role is clearly defined in the school story as the swot.The school story genre allows her this room as a defined role but it she must adapt when the genre changes to a conservative high fantasy wherein gender roles are somewhat different. During theà Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, she reverts to the quiet studious Hermione of the first novel when Harry gets theà magickedà version of the potions book. As Harry falls under its spell and useful marginalia, she becomes increasingly exasperated at his lack of work or effort in the class commenting aâ⠬? Well, it wasnââ¬â¢t exactly your own work, was it? aâ⠬? (Half-Blood Prince, p 182). She and Ginny are protective of Harry and test the spell book which he has picked up, though they do not see the inscription claiming it is the property of the Half-Blood prince. With the aid of Ginny Weasley, she also defends him during the setting up of the self-help Dark Arts group, theà acronymedà DA, inà Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. Gathering the curious students together in the Hogââ¬â¢s Head, she comments aâ⠬? well I thought it would be good if we, well, took matters into our own handsâ⬠¦ And by that I mean learning how to defend ourselves properly, not just in theory but doing the real spellaâ⠬? Half-Blood Prince, p 303). Though she is instrumental in gathering the class, she immediately reverts to her supporting role and allows Harry to discuss the events at the end ofà Harry Potter and the Goblet of Firewhere he met the revived Voldemort. Her tenure as Prefect inà Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenixà shows her stopping theà Weasleyà twins from recruiting junior members of the school to test their joke wares,à saying aâ⠬? I told you this morning, you canââ¬â¢t test your rubbish on students! aâ⠬? (Order of the Phoenix, p 229) whilst Ron, her fellow Prefect, looks on from the side.Although she is active in keeping the more extreme elements of the carnivalesque from taking over the school in the form of the Weasley brotherââ¬â¢s joke wares, it does mark the apogee of the progression from swot to Prefect in the school novel. Though these roles are usually played by various characters in the school story genre, Rowling has rolled them into one person who exemplifies the qualities of Hogwarts and, in particular,à Gryffindor. Though Hermione is keen on the maintenance of the status quo, she becomes increasingly vocal against the abuse of power in two areas.She has mixed success but it allows her to retain her role in the social cohesion of the friendship group and to begin organising ot hers in the school. Firstly she challenges a perceived abuse of the house elves by theà wizardingà classes and sets up the Society for the Protection of Elvish Welfare, SPEW. This act comes afterà Dobbyà is freed by Harry inà Harry Potter and Chamber of Secrets. Hermione starts knitting hats to free the elves from their slave positions at Hogwarts inOrder of the Phoenixà and when challenged about this by Ron, exclaims aâ⠬? Of course they want to be free! aâ⠬? (Order of the Phoenix, p 230).Whilst it may mirrorà Rowlingââ¬â¢sà own time working for Amnesty International, she undermines Hermione by having Dobby pick up all the hats as the elves are offended by them. Though she gains the partial support of Dumbledore as he explains to Harry that he had encouragedà Siriusà to treatKreacherà with kindnessà (Order of the Phoenix, p 733),à Ron and Harry dismiss her efforts. To an extent, she loves hopeless causes and sets out to free the elves despite t heir reluctance to change their positions. Secondly, she attacks the misuses of authority by teachers, such as Severus Snape and Doloresà Umbridge.Inà Prisoner ofà Azkaban, Snape takes over Lupinaâ⠬â⠢s classes while he recovers from his change. Ignoring the class protests he begins to set them work which will provide clues to Lupinaâ⠬â⠢s condition and Hermione protestsà (Prisoner of Azkaban, p128) which encourages Ron to defend her and receive detention. She becomes increasingly agitated byà Snapeaâ⠬â⠢sà manner and challenges him through questions. Though she has been able to answer the questions that he puts to the class since the first book, earning his contempt, she now uses these as a challenge to his authority through passive disruption.Inà Order of the Phoenix, Dolores Umbridge attempts to run a school based on the traditional school model of learning the theory of Defence against the Dark Arts rather than practical lessons. Hermione listens toà Umbridgeaâ⠬â⠢sà long speech which sets out the rationale for the coming changes. During the first Defence against the Dark Arts lesson she immediately questionsà Umbridgeaâ⠬â⠢sà passive stance through using Umbridgeââ¬â¢s insistence on pupils raising their hands to ask questions (Order of the Phoenix, p 217-218). Asking the question, she repeats herself when the answer is not forthcoming.Hermione continues this with the creation of the Dark Arts orà Dumbledoreaâ⠬â⠢sà Army group. As Umbridge tries to crack down on any nascent dissent against the Ministry of Magicaâ⠬â⠢s policy, Hermione comes up with the plan of setting a group to rectify the lack of practical training. Facing the belief that Harry killedà Cedric,à fuelledby the Daily Prophet, she motivates the students to come together and to learn practical defence. As she does this she comments aâ⠬? dââ¬â¢you know â⬠¦ I think Iââ¬â¢m feeling a bi tà â⬠¦ rebelliousaâ⠬? (Order of the Phoenix, p 559).Rather than continuing her challenge to misplaced authority, once the school story ends, she moves towards the role of the sister. Whilst on the run from the Ministry of Magic inà Harry Potter and the Deathly HallowsHarry confesses to Ron that Hermione is aâ⠬? like a sister,aâ⠬? he went on aâ⠬? I love her like a sister and I reckon she feels the same about meaâ⠬? (Deathly Hallows, p308). To some degree she follows the path ofà Lyrain Pullmanââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËHis Dark Materialsââ¬â¢ trilogy where the she develops her challenges early on but end up giving up independence.Before she meets Will, Lyra is free to challenge the authority figures around her but after the meeting, when Will is cooking an omelette, he commands aâ⠬? ââ¬â¢Find a couple of platesââ¬â¢ he said, and Lyra obediently did soaâ⠬? (The Subtle Knifeà p 25). After the defeat of Voldemort, we see her and Ron on Platf orm 9 A? s waving their children off on the Hogwarts express. The action occurs around Harry and Ron with Hermione chiding them when they see Scorpius, Dracoââ¬â¢s son, with aâ⠬?Donââ¬â¢t try to turn them against each other before theyââ¬â¢ve even started schoolaâ⠬? (Deathly Hallows, p605). She is keen to maintain stability in the world for the children. As she develops into adolescence, she moves away from her rebellious side straight into motherhood, so avoiding Susanââ¬â¢s fate in the ââ¬ËChronicles of Narniaââ¬â¢. Though she moves into adolescence, she is faithful to Ron, declaring her love for him in theà Deathly Hallows. Despite Lupinââ¬â¢s proclamation of her talent, we finally see Hermione taking her children to platform 9 A?.She avoids Susanââ¬â¢s banishment from the magical world because she cares for her friends and, ultimately, children and is not selfish as Susan is implied to be by Aslan in the quotation at the beginning of this essa y. Yet it seems a poor fate for all her achievements. The boarding school genre allows Hermione to excel academically and be an equal to Harry and Ron. She develops and is capable of taking on teaching duties and, it would appear, likely to followà Minervaà McGonagallas the archetypal spinster teacher. She is the archetypal swot who becomes Prefect as she gets to the end of her school years.Her insistence upon hardwork and her dislike of cheats, even if they are her friends, show Hermioneââ¬â¢s dedication to maintaining order, though not at any price. She also takes on what appear to be hopeless causes, the release of the elves and then challenges against misused authority, despite the ridicule of her peers. Hermione stands against inequality and tries to effect change. Dumbledore is the only person who backs her stance, and this is only very partially, as he explains to Harry. Dealing with her own social group, she is more effective in galvanising her peers into forming the Dark Arts group.Yet she is on the edge of the social group. On the train to Hogwarts, it is Harry who accepts her into the nascent group and then more firmly once the troll is defeated in the bathrooms. Once theà OWLsà have been taken, Hermione moves away from being the bright academic, her role in helping with Ron and Harry finishing their homework redundant, to being involved in maintaining the group with Ron and Harry through her caring for both boys. It is only Hermione who can cope with the real world of Oxford Street before they manage to get into more magical territory.The school narrative allows Hermione to blossom as an individual as the closed world of Hogwarts bars the real world and gives her space as a person. Once the real world begins to encroach, she begins to move away from her academic achievements and into the big sister role. At one level Rowling sees Hermione as a caricature of her school memories but at another, the Harry Potter series fails to address the idea that girls can do more than become mothers or spinster teachers. In Narnia thePevensieà children are either kept in childlike paradise away from ever growing up or they are ejected from paradise for thinking of the adult world.In ââ¬ËHis Dark Materialsââ¬â¢, Lyra moves from challenging the misplaced authority of Mrsà Coulterà and Lordà Asrielà to leaving Will to make all the decisions. Hermioneââ¬â¢s own contributions to the group come through enabling Harry to complete tasks with the requisite knowledge that she can find or discern. Once the fight against Voldemort moves into Harryââ¬â¢s own history, only Dumbledore can help Harry. Whilst on the run inà Deathly Hallows, it is Hermione who tries to keep the group together and to work out Dumbledoreââ¬â¢s final clue in the book of fairy tales. She is a catalyst for those around her and remains sidelined.Whilst she shows that she can develop herself againstà Mendlesohnââ¬â¢sà analysis through her own talent,Dresangââ¬â¢sà assertion that Hermione gains strength through empowering others is shown to only be partial; she sacrifices her individual power and role to help recreate a safe world. Once she has enable Harry, Rowling moves her into a maternal role, her highest honour. It short changes the Witch that Lupin described as the brightest of her age. Bibliography Jackson, Rosemary,à Fantasy: The Literature of Subversionà (Routledge, London, 1981) Lewis, C. S. ,à The Last Battle(Harper Collins, London, 2005)Moorcock, Michael,à Wizardry and Wild Romance: A Study of Epic Romanceà (Gollancz, London, 1987) Pullman, Philip,à The Subtle Knifeà (Scholastic, London, 1997, 2001 reprint) Rotruck, Amie Rose, ââ¬ËWhere Have All the Tomboys Gone? : Female Figures in British Childrenââ¬â¢s Fantasy Seriesââ¬â¢ inà Foundation: The International Review of Science Fictionà Volume 32, Number 88, Summer 2003 Rowling, J. K. , Harry Potter and the Philosopherââ¬â ¢s Stone (Bloomsbury, London, 1997) Rowling, J. K. ,à Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secretsà (Bloomsbury, London, 1998) Rowling, J. K. ,à Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkabanà (Bloomsbury, London, 1999) Rowling, J.K. ,à Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fireà (Bloomsbury, London, 2000) J. K. Rowling,à Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenixà (Bloomsbury, London, 2003) Rowling, J. K. ,à Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Princeà (Bloomsbury, London, 2005) Rowling, J. K. ,à Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallowà (Bloomsbury, London, 2007) Reynolds, Kimberley (ed),à Modern Childrenââ¬â¢s Literature: An Introductionà (Palgrave, Basingstoke, 2005) Whited, Lana A (ed),à Harry Potter and the Ivory Tower: Perspectives on a Literary Phenomenonà (University of Missouri Press, Columbia, 2004)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment