Blog Post 2: Harry Potter Series


One of my favorite contemporary stories of witches and werewolves is from the Harry Potter series. These witches and wizards were a hidden society that maintained protection and ignorance between magical and human worlds; therefore, the witches and wizards were not scorned or hunted as detailed in Palmer’s Culture of Darkness Witches chapter. The Harry Potter series shows a class distinction Palmer wrote about in his Blood, Bread, and Blasphemy chapter, but the roles have been reversed. The pure blood witches and wizards are in power, the muggle (or human) born witches and wizards are thought to be of less value, and the humans are equated to Palmer’s peasants with little or no value to the magical world, There was an instance in the sixth book, where the human Prime Minister met the magical minister and the human Prime Minister reflected that he was uneasy and frightened by the magical minister. The magical minister explains the war happening in the magical world and then starts ordering the Prime Minister to do certain tasks to maintain calmness in the human world. This interaction displayed a clear distinction between witches and humans, similar to the class difference between rich/clergy and peasants. Throughout the series multiple characters are berated for being muggle-born, or human-born. The term “mudblood” was introduced in the second book as a horrible slang term to call a muggle-born witch or wizard. On the other hand, the pure-blood witches and wizards are held with high regard and have seats in the magical government. There was no widely known muggle-born in the government depicted throughout the series. The Harry Potter series has more examples of the role reversal in class differences when thinking of witches and wizards compared to humans.

Comments

  1. I think it's distinctive that the Harry Potter universe chose to create those "classes" within the magical community. Historically, the moral panic around witches mostly was to scapegoat them all together into one group, and there wasn't really any discussion or creation of a hierarchy within that community. I think the magical classes in Harry Potter reflect the modern/contemporary motivation of the witch stereotype which is to serve as a larger metaphor for various marginalized groups, as well as social commentary. The muggleborn witches and wizards can be seen as either a race or wealth metaphor instead of focusing on the danger of the powers of magic. This to me is the major shift of the use of the witch archetype in the contemporary period.

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  2. The books, especially the final book, make the scapegoating extremely specific. Instead of the Church, there is pure-blood rule, and the "non-pure" witches are put on trial, where they are assumed guilty unless proven innocent, and they are accused of stealing their magic from a source outside of themselves - in this case a pure-blood wizard. I find it interesting that the witches are put on trial for the same reason as in church-led inquisitions, but mirrored; The criminal act is stealing in one instance and in the other receiving willingly.

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