• @[email protected]
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    24310 months ago

    Yeah, it’s Harry Potter. Social change is the enemy in the book. At no point does anyone try to improve anything in the book. They don’t even oppose evil that much. They just oppose it when the existing evil tries to go too far by the current standards of evil.

    • @[email protected]
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      12410 months ago

      Hermione tries to raise awareness about elf mistreatment.

      It’s implied that Dumbledore was trying to influence Fudge to improve things in their regular correspondence before the GoF/OotP story arc.

      • @[email protected]
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        15110 months ago

        Then she gets to meet the slave race they keep in the basement and said slaves explain that their enslavement is a fundamental part of magic society and the only reason Dobby in particular had to be freed was because his owners were a bit too mean to him. The message becomes “slavery is fine as long as slaves are treated well.”. Then they drop that particular can of worms because addressing it would require societal change. It is one of few endeavours where the heroes of the story just fail to do what they want.

        • @[email protected]
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          10010 months ago

          Fuck it. Some more rambles because the house elves drive me insane.

          The correct response to a slave race that wants to be subjugated is to refuse. You can see in the books that the existance of slave races has made the Wizards worse people and it makes them used to treating other races, that are free and sentient, as slaves. Tons of sentient races we meet in the story are either service staff or set dressing for wizards amusement.

          • @[email protected]
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            2510 months ago

            What the fuck, you’re right. Owning slaves is detrimental to how even the owners see the world. If we tolerate slavery even if we’re on the benefitting side, it alters our worldview to include better and lesser peoples.

        • @[email protected]
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          2110 months ago

          The house elves plot is one of the best examples of why the movies are significantly better than the books.

        • @[email protected]
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          2010 months ago

          Wtf? Hermione goes to a point where she tries her best to force the freedom on them (leaving clothes around so they accidentaly pick them up and) so be freed. I think it is canon that she still pursues it even after school and makes actual changes while working at the Ministry.

        • @[email protected]
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          610 months ago

          said slaves explain that their enslavement is a fundamental part of magic society and the only reason Dobby in particular had to be freed was because his owners were a bit too mean to him

          Its crazy how a big part of subsequent novels is Dobby being unable to exist without slavishly devoting himself to another wizard. And his arc ends with him literally catching a bullet for Harry because he’s convinced his life is worth less than a wizard’s.

          Just imagine reading “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” and the whole way through its just Jim finding newer and more obsequies ways to serve at Huck’s whims.

      • Cethin
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        10 months ago

        Yep, and she constantly gets made fun of for it.

          • @[email protected]
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            610 months ago

            I don’t know about you but I think the people who argued in favour of abolishing slavery were not historically ridiculed as far as I’ve ever heard.

            • @[email protected]
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              1310 months ago

              Can’t say for sure about that, since we weren’t there, but we are here now, and you can bet humanitarian and progressive voices are ridiculed today.

              • @[email protected]
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                10 months ago

                I can say for certain that they were, having read a book besides Harry Potter.

                Shit, some American pre-Civil War slaver beat an abolitionist to death in Congress and got cheered for it in the South.

            • @[email protected]
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              310 months ago

              Here in the US we had a little scuffle based largely around slavery and those who wanted to abolish it were gunned down by the hundreds of thousands.

      • Neato
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        5510 months ago

        Dumbledore is the single most powerful wizard know, and the most influential in magical Britian. He runs a school where he is beloved by nearly everyone. If he wanted to change things, he easily could have done more. Especially since Fudge wasn’t very powerful and had to deal with an entire bureaucracy. Direct change at the school itself would have been feasible.

        And while the parents might have threatened to remove their students, they weren’t really. Where else are they going to send their kids to get educated? There are other schools but the culture difference was so stark that seems unlikely.

        • @[email protected]
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          1710 months ago

          That’s like saying “Dumbledore had the biggest assault rifle of anyone, so he can do anything”.

          Sure he was a powerful duelist, but a group of others could take him down.

          So, setting the “power” aside, he has 2 choices:

          1. Operate within the system and bureaucracy to effect change via normal political motion

          2. Use non combat magic to manipulate others, (time travel, invisibility, foresight) effectively hoping to be a benevolent authoritarian

          If he goes with 1, he has to maintain favor. You can see how tenuous that is, with his favor slipping during the unrest. The parents wouldn’t take their kids out of Hogwarts long term, they’d kick.dumbledore out instead.

          For the most part it’s feasible that he could have made more direct changes to the school, yes. Good point.

          • @[email protected]
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            3010 months ago

            Sure he was a powerful duelist, but a group of others could take him down.

            I didn’t read that even slightly as if he was talking about magical power; I read it as he was talking about Dumbledore being extremely influential.

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            That’s like saying “Dumbledore had the biggest assault rifle of anyone, so he can do anything”.

            Except it’s not, not even close. Having a gun is not the same as having authority and influence in an institution or government. He ran Hogwarts, for one thing, as you said. He could have very easily refused to have house elves at the school unless they were paid employees, and that alone would have made a very public statement, which would have meant a lot on a societal level coming from such an important, influential, public figure. There are other options for labour, so it’s not like he had any excuse not to. He also had political influence and could have pushed for changes in legislation if he wanted. Part of why the ministry was so afraid of him was because of the influence he had. It wasn’t because he was a string wizard and they thought he would come to the ministry one day and shoot up the place if he didn’t get his way, Dumbledore could only do so much against an entire building full of powerful wizards, even he wouldn’t be able to stand up to all of the ministry’s aurors. He had friends, connections, a reputation, a history, control over one of the most influential schools in the world which produced a significant percentage of the world’s licenced and trained Wizarding population, direct access to thousands of witches and wizards who could all potentially be the next minister of magic or the next Voldemort or hell the next Dumbledore. He absolutely could have leveraged that to change something societally but he only ever used it to maintain his own status quo when the ministry got too jumpy and tried to knock him down a few pegs.

            If he goes with 1, he has to maintain favor.

            You say that like it would be difficult. He was beloved by most of his students, many of which had influential parents or would become influential themselves. He had an untold number of connections from favours he’d provided over the years, people he’d helped, or even just friends in high places. He was close with many high ranking experts in their respective field including his professors and others outside of Hogwarts. He’d previously been the one to take down the first wizard Hitler, and had been instrumental in fighting the second wizard Hitler. Etc, etc. His favour only slipped with the ministry precisely because they were aware of the power he held politically and were afraid of him leveraging that, and thought his claims of Voldemort returning were part of a move to take over the ministry. That was the entire deal behind the Dumbledore’s army conspiracy. Even when they managed to force him out of Hogwarts they had to basically play dirty and strong arm him out of the position because they knew they couldn’t do it through any legitimate channels. Even then the school constantly pushed back against them taking over and it became a nightmare to deal with.

            But it’s not like he would have to stage a revolution to enact meaningful change. All he’d have to do is suggest a change in legislation to important figures who respected his opinion, openly advocate for said legislation to gain public support, y’know, regular everyday activism and political lobbying, and he’d undoubtedly get results.

            • @[email protected]
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              410 months ago

              I’m not gonna read all that you hardly formatted it.

              First sentence refers to having a gun, and yeah , the person I replied to mentioned him being a powerful wizard. That’s all I commented on there.

              Further in my comment I discuss politics, choices, and influence.

            • @[email protected]
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              110 months ago

              Did you read the books? The limitations of Dumbledore’s political (in the general sense) power, in and out of Hogwarts, is a recurring theme. He regularly tries to influence things, but encounters pushback from other politically powerful people. His methodical attempts to incept progress in a stubborn and prejudiced society steeped in traditionalism are a constant backdrop to thee books. His inability to just do whatever he wanted at Hogwarts and the limits of his societal influence are basically the whole plot of the 5th book.

              • @[email protected]
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                110 months ago

                Yes I did, I read and reread them many times as a kid and I never saw enough evidence that he had enough limitations to prevent him from doing something like lobbying for legislation. The degree of influence he held in the Wizarding world was huge and none of the reasons given for why he would struggle with changing things convinced me that they were enough to combat the sheer volume of feats Dumbledore had achieved throughout his career, the number of friends he had in high places, or the fact that he, again, very publicly defeated Wizard Hitler 1.0. The 5th book actually showcased pretty strongly how far his influence had spread and how much it intimidated the ministry. He had inside men in both Voldemort’s circle (Snape) and the ministry’s circle (Kingsley), neither of which were ever suspected or discovered by the leaders of the organizations they’d infiltrated, and he even orchestrated an entire underground order of powerful and influential wizards and witches working in the shadows to fight against Voldemort right under the ministry’s nose. It’s not like Fudge was terrified of him aiming for Minister of Magic for no reason.

                • @[email protected]
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                  110 months ago

                  And despite all that, he was basically ousted from the school he supposedly had so much control over, for what again? Saying “Wizard Hitler bad, and maybe not actually dead, and we should probably consider doing something about that”? Seems like a fairly uncontroversial proposition, and yet look at the results.

                  Do you really think that highlighting the slavery supporting wizard society would have been better received? How many of the pure blood families would have left that move unchallenged? How many of his friends in high places would have backed him up? How much of that influence and political capital would he have used up just getting legislation drafted, much less passed?

                  You don’t maintain influence by calling in favors frivolously, and there are bigger fish to fry than house elves. Wizard Hitler, for example.

          • @[email protected]
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            1010 months ago

            Yes, the two modes. Timid acceptance of the status quo with minor calls for change behind closed or full blown revolution and authoritarianism.

              • @[email protected]
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                810 months ago

                Did you not present binary options where the first option is what Dumbledore did in the books and the other option is him being authoritarian. Are there more numbers on your option list I didn’t see?

                • @[email protected]
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                  10 months ago

                  The first is not being timid. You made that up. He is a prominent, popular member of the political class, with significant sway and influence.

                  At the end of the comment I acknowledged that he could probably have moved faster with changes at the school. Dunno if you read that far.

                  I’m essentially saying he can either be a rational, normal member of a society (albeit well positioned ), or resort to authoritarian options. Are you suggesting another, or did you just want to keep being annoying?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    710 months ago

                    If he was against the use of house elves in the book he was extremely timid about it. At no point in the books does he present himself as a political player in the world.

        • @[email protected]
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          1010 months ago

          Dumbledore got kicked out in Chamber of Secrets by the governors. If he started implementing more radical progressive changes, that would happen on an even quicker timeline.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Tries and fails. It never goes anywhere, and she’s mocked as a well-meaning fool for trying in the first place because “welp most elves just enjoy being slaves what can you do shrug emoji”. Jkr sets up something with Hermione and the elves and then doesn’t follow through with it in any meaningful way (and I don’t count commentary from her outside the books as following through) so it’s left to just sit there uncritically as “slavery is a thing in this universe and is seen as completely normal by most characters, and only one person ever tries to do anything about it and she’s depicted as a cringey radical in the process”. Jkr doesn’t even show the beginnings of societal change like more elves coming to Dobby’s side of things once they see it’s an option and that Dobby’s is happy that way, or other house elves being motivated to think differently about their situation and starting to unlearn their generations of indoctrination. We don’t even see a glimpse of Winky starting to recover instead the last we see of her is as a depressed alcoholic whose life was ruined by her being freed from slavery. Jkr depicts it as “yeah slavery is bad but you can’t change the way the world works so might as well not even try.” the house elves’ servitude is treated as something so fundamentally tied to their species that it seems to be biological and thus humans taking advantage of that is to some degree the natural way of things which, I shouldn’t have to explain what the problem with that sort of depiction is. Maybe that wasn’t what she intended, maybe she just added slavery because it’s a common world building trope, but if that’s the case she did so without considering the implications or how it would come across in the end product or the messages it would send.

        • @[email protected]
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          2010 months ago

          Holy shit. The more I read the less I like that woman. Biologically coded slavery? Sounds like some debunked phrenology bullshit.

            • @[email protected]
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              610 months ago

              Not even just in the writing.

              Literally on the floor in the Goblin Bank in the movie.

              There’s so many fucking racist tropes in the book that once you start glancing around you can’t stop seeing them.

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          Isn’t Winky’s alcoholism also played for laughs? As is Trelawney’s.

          It’s weird how casually Harry accepts slavery. All Hagrid has to do is say that Dobby is a weirdo and the slaves like being slaves, then he’s okay with putting Christmas decorations on decapitated slave heads.

        • @[email protected]
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          310 months ago

          Jkr sets up something with Hermione and the elves and then doesn’t follow through with it in any meaningful way

          In fairness, this is a common theme across all of JKR’s writings after Goblet of Fire.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Hermione tries to raise awareness about elf mistreatment.

        For maybe two dozen paragraphs in one book, and then she gives up because literally no other wizard will support her.

        Its just so funny that there’s a scene in Book 5 where Voldemort blows up a statue dedicated to Wizard Supremacy and you’re honestly not sure who the bad guy is anymore.

        • @[email protected]
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          410 months ago

          Voldemort didn’t disagree with the message of the statue. Him blowing it up wasn’t a show of solidarity with non-wizard races.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      They don’t even question systemic problems within the magic world, let alone challenging them. Everyone is extremely content with the social stratification - something emblematic of the British society. In the books everyone is perfectly content with the oppression, just as long as THEY get to be the oppressors.

      I was never a fan of the series - noticed these issues right from the first book. Every subsequent book or movie I couldn’t help but noticing how cruel everyone was - even the protagonists.

      • @[email protected]
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        610 months ago

        But can I ask why that would put you off the series? The books are essentially a product of the society the author wrote them in, so it’s not as if they present an unbelievable social narrative, as it’s emblematic of British society as you said. Is it that you want/expect more of an engaged society from the magical world, or is it just boring to read of social attitudes that are so close to our own. Genuinely curious, as I’m not a massive fan of the series myself, but for other reasons :) I’ve never considered your point of view so it’d be good to understand

        • It is the potrayal of these conditions as acceptable/good. Many children of that generation loved the books and dreamed to be in Hogwarts and this magical world overall. It is given to an uncritical audience in an uncritical way.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        The problem is that the first four books are “monster of the week” children’s books. Everything operates on good guy/bad guy because the world building is a shallow pond - which is fine, they’re fun children’s books. Addressing the systemic issues would have required her to actually plan out her universe, and you can really see it start to fall apart by book 5.

    • Neato
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      2910 months ago

      Voldemort tried to overthrow the status quo. He was trying to install a viscous fascist state, but that actually wasn’t important to the characters’ motivations. The only thing that changed by the end of the series was the removal of Voldie’s stooges from government. Everything went back to normal. I think they might not have rebuilt the Torture Prison, but unsure.

      • @[email protected]
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        3010 months ago

        Almost makes you wonder why he bothered. I mean the society seemed pretty accepting of fascism before he got involved. Casually the racism displayed by random characters not even villains shows through. The man could have probably easily gotten into office. Like everything he accomplished could have probably been done in the daylight with minimal opposition.

    • @[email protected]
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      1510 months ago

      At no point does anyone try to improve anything in the book

      This just goes to show you how little people care about elves. Even after the revolution you ignore that anything has changed.

      • Neato
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        3110 months ago

        Almost nothing changed for house-elves. SPEW existed and literally only one person actually cared about it. The author also made her attempts laughably bad at raising awareness. Coupled this author sabotage with the author creating a race of slaves that want to be enslaved speaks volumes about the fact that there was never going to be real change. In the epilogue only Hermione really cares much still.

      • @[email protected]
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        210 months ago

        Wrong. In the books Neville knocks over the shelf with all the time travel gadgets and they are all destroyed. I am not joking.

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        Kinda, not really. You can’t undo anything that’s already been done, and what you decide to do to change things already happened, so there’s not a lot of major change you can do. You’re throwing pebbles into a river and attempting to change its course. Maybe if all the wizards used the time turners at once they might be able to change what a day max? I don’t remember what the limit of the time turners was, but either way, she didn’t implement them well, which is why I think she destroyed all of them in book 5