Disney Does Derrida: John Granger at Lumos 2006; Decons and Red Hens
Intro So, here finally, after much ado, is my write up of John Granger's talk on Rowling as what I will call a "Post-Post-Modern." First, by way of intro there were some cool things in Granger's Intro. The first is the commonly noted Minesweeper thing. When I saw on her site "99 seconds ..." I was like Harry and Ron about Hermione's thoughts on the Half-Blood Prince being Eileen Prince - "No Way!" - I think the best I ever did was 169 seconds, and I was flying (for me). But what Granger notes here is very true, MS is definitely not all about logic - I have come down to things in MS that are straight up 50-50 draws as far as logic goes. According to Granger it is "pattern recognition" and Rowling has pattern expert in her blood (hence the ability to work well in the area of plot construction and ability to have a sort of catalogue of conventions ready to mind to the level of being able to manage not only using up to 12 genres plot-structure types interwoven and also manage to break from each at key points as tip offs for the reader as far as what to pay attention to). The second was the way he described literature as having a "timely" side and a "timeless" side, which I thought was a really good way to encapsulate it because immediately made me think of kronos and kairos but it also brought to mind what I have learned thus far in Biblical studies of the two primary paths to studying the literature: diachronic methods ("timely" methods such as historical setting/criticism, source criticism etc) and synchronic methods ("timeless" methods such as structural analysis etc) Terms of Estrangement The title for this sub-heading is my own for the terms used in what Granger is discussing, which is really, at base, a process of arriving at true communion/unity by way of the necessary prior deconstruction of false models/ideas of unity. In the essay as it appears on the Lumos CD, one of the tenets of Postmodernism Granger lists is "unity is ignorance, pluralism is deliverance" and the way he ties that out with Rowling as a postmodern who even PoMos the PoMos made me think of Aristotle's criticism of Plato's Republic: that the ideal in the Republic seemed to be of a choir all singing exactly the same melody line in unison, when what should be strived for is the harmony of uniquely distinct notes in concert together. So, here are some of the pertinent terms to Postmodernism (Granger recommends reading Lawrence Cahoone's From Postmodernism to Modernism: An Anthology). 1. Metanarrative: This is also called the "Grand Narrative" and the object of PoMo lit is usually to deconstruct the wrong, prevailing metanarrative and offer an alternative in its place. The term "meta" itself means "with or after," and so, for example, "metaphysics" is that which is left to discuss in reality after you get beyond the physics of the material world. Meta-Narrative is then the narrative that is left after the narrative proper is gotten beyond, the narrative that underlies (as prejudices etc) the narrative proper and which the narrative proper shows the deconstruction of. Granger has two examples here, one he drew out more clearly in the talk and the other more clearly in the paper. The first is what I would call the "internal self-perception of the wizarding world" - the four houses as the sort of ground of reality but with no point of deeper unity. The second is what I would call the WW's perception of itself as it does and should function in relation to those outside itself, that is the statue of magical brethren: The WW has this image of itself in the wizard and witch with the goblin , house-elf and centaur all looking adoringly up at it and, as Dumbledore tells Harry ... that statue is a lie. Operating alongside, or maybe rather as part of, these two, is the whole issue of how the wizarding world relates to the muggle world. Granger makes the statement that we are not allowed in the text to be pro-muggle. As I'll note below, I'm not quite sure how to take this and may simply need to absorb his paper more. I don't think it is Rowling's take on muggles per se - Granger uses the example of the campground ticket-taker in GOF and Frank Bryce in GOF as the only positive muggle characters and simply being thrown in for mechanical reasons because we need muggles for Voldy and the death eaters to torture or kill and need to know that it was not something they deserved (as we might feel if somebody tortured Vernon Dursely) ... which I'm not sure is exactly the case. The campground owner, maybe ... but I think we see some actual courage in the case of Frank Bryce. However, Granger may be mainly pointing out that under the metanarratives of the wizarding world, which, as Granger notes, Harry has largely accepted (especially the 4 houses metanarrative in the form of the Slytherin-Gryffindor antithesis), we the audience are tempted to buy those metanarratives and see Frank Bryce as a mere plot mechanics character. 2. Post-Structuralism: "Structures" means the societal institutions which carry and enforce the metanarratives. Thus, in post-modernism, "All these structures, as vehicles of prejudicial and confining metanarratives, are the authorities the spirit of our times tells us to resist." (From Granger's DDD paper) 3. Deconstruction: This is basically what gets done to the metanarratives and sturctures. I n general, in thinking about what I am going to say below, I think (and this is what I think Granger is arguing and Rowling is doing) that some deconstruction is necessary - but just for clarity, as far as I have been able to get a handle on the terms involved, deconstructionism refers specifically to the deconstruction phase only, whereas post-modernism and post-structuralism are more wholistic terms that also encompass the "rebuilding" phase and what type of rebuilding it is to be. When I speak below of "Deconstructionism" or "hard-line/core deconstructionism" I am addressing more what seems to me to be a camp that operates on the assumption that for the most part all language falls apart as a means of true communications and that the only thing you can do is to reconstruct a meaning radically incongruous to the original and use it for your own ends. House Guests and House Elves, Chiasm of books 2 and 6 and Red Hen. This whole thing of deconstructionism is where I wanted to touch on some of what has been discussed regarding Red Hen's theories, especially since "deconstructing" is the term which Pauli used of RH in conversation with me even before we started to get into all this talk of PoMos. This came to the fore of my mind in hearing that RH's theories on Dumbledore concern him being manipulative and conniving (which I admit, I have not gotten around to reading those particular essays myself ... but the details related seem pretty specific ... that DD intended the death eaters to get into the castle while he was absent, thus seriously risking safety of staff and students, and that he even fixed the broken cabinet himself for that end). The example that has come to mind recently in listening to HBP is a chiastic pairing between books 2 and 6 which involves the Dursleys and their houseguests and a house elf. In book 2 you have the Masons and Dobby and in book 6 you have Dumbledore and Kreacher. As for the book 4 center of chiasm, you have Winky and the Crouch family, ie a house elf in relation to her wizard family. In book 2 you have the Dursleys relating to a muggle superior (whom Vernon is sycophantically trying to suck up to) , impacted by the actions of an oppressed house-elf trying to save Harry. By way of the examination of house-elves being dragged by their family into complicity in dark deeds in book 4 you wind up in book 6 with muggle-raised Harry being the owner of a house elf and this being unveiled in the Dursley's sitting room as they are about to be upbraided, this time by a wizard who is their superior. The question is where it goes from there. And that really is the question. Red Hen seems to take the thing of deconstructing the wizarding world prejudice/metanarrative to the extent of including Dumbledore, unequivocally, in the same boat as Fudge, Umbridge and the rest. Thus, going back to that statue in the ministry that was destroyed in book 5, when Dumbledore animates the statues so that they protect Harry and get shattered for his protection ... there you have it, puppet-master Dumbledore the manipulative wizard simply using the downtrodden as cannon fodder and shields. Of course he may also be using simply the "image" (the eikon) that wizards have built of how they think these magical brethren adore them ... and even then I am sure you could read that a certain way if you wanted, that he should have just walked in the day the statue was built and smashed it rather than waiting till now to use it to protect Harry etc etc And so it is with his advice to Harry concerning Kreacher. Kreacher is a house elf (and I liked the feminist reading Granger has here of house elves being roughly allegorical of oppressed house wives) and has dignity ... should he be made against his will to go do work at Hogwarts? The thing is, work is in Kreacher's blood, and he is in a pretty bad state ... he would rather be kicked by Draco Malfoy than spoken to by Hermione Granger. All things considered, including, yes, the practicality of the knowledge he possesses, this is the best course of action. For one it puts him around his own kindred. Granted they have a much different take on things than he does and I'm not sure any of them will persuade him of anything in conversation (the majority tend to steer clear of Dobby and Winky a bit too), but it is probably the best thing for him. In the reality of the Wizarding World as it exists, a house elf without a place to serve is a person without a home ... and Hogwarts under Dumbledore is the best home a house elf could hope to find in the present Wizarding World, precisely because, as Granger notes, he agrees with Hermione that house elves are mistreated (in short, he is willing to deconstruct his own world in hopes of helping it to become a better one). The thing is, the house-elves as a race are one of the "constituted others" that Granger notes as a key component to the metanarrative and structure to be (the action usually involves the salvation of an "other" in the process of deconstructing the metanarrative and sturctures that carry it). But if we take this instance of house elf treatment as condemning Dumbledore and that contributing to a reading of him as always manipulative and a wicked old wizard etc, we have to completely discount or deconstruct the character reactions to him of warm affection by other down-trodden, such as Lupin, Black and Hagrid. Dumbledore himself acknowledges making mistakes in regards to pairing Harry with Snape for occlumency lessons and not taking into account the impact their history will have on their ability to work together on it, and errors in judgment etc But to take it to the level that it sounds like it is being taken in some of the theories talked about, sounds like the deconstructionism is being taken too far, to the level where one has to deconstruct/discount the character responses to DD by other genuinely downtrodden and genuinely good characters (and ones who seem pretty discerning at that, I mean Lupin was able to approach Snape with thankfulness for the WB potion even though Snape exposed him in the end, and if all our "good Snape" theories are right, it would seem that Lupin at the Burrow is more right than he is at the end of HBP) Equal Time for RH Now, as I said, the one place I personally find some of Red Hen's theories more plausible is with regards to the issue of dementors and their role in the under-pinning of the narrative, Ie their role in Tom Riddle Jr coming about as he has and the role of the Ministry of Magic in allying with the dementors. This is place where, I will admit, there is a lot of mystery for me. Some of the things in Granger's paper I am still digesting and not exactly sure yet how to take or where I stand on them. For instance, he notes that it is fascinating that the very targets of some of the criticisms find the works interesting and fascinating. I do think that there can be constructive criticism of particular types and those types take it positively in good-natured humility ... I'm just not sure that the picture of the muggle prime minister in the first chapter of HBP is that much of a criticism when he is used as a foil for Fudge and Scrimgeour ... now those two themselves, however, if you take them as linking up to Blair, that is a criticism. The question of dementors is even more mysterious to me than that of the prime minister. Granger notes that their absence from the fountain sculpture as a "magical brethren" is as conspicuous as the absence of the giants, referring to them as among the "constituted others" class, and Kim Decina speaks of them (in one of the posts here) as "sentient beings." To be honest, I'm really not sure where I stand on this ... I haven't thought about it enough to really say fully. Rowling has spoken of them as the incarnation of despair and depression, which is pretty negative language, but then maybe despair and depression are like deconstruction in the present context ... the need is not to try to "kill" (nor to try to "use" it as the ministry does) it but to work through it to something more positive. Maybe dementors are like orcs, beings perverted from a healthier race (you would have to fill in a lot of back story there, but who knows, I guess you could have Hermione digging up some serious research on dementors in the library) and what the dementors were originally were was a form of empathy (which seems even now to be their main mode of operation, empathy to the level of feeding on psychic energy). Of course, all this also bears on the discussion of bipartite and tripartite anthropology, on which I have arrived at some thoughts that seem to me to make a little more sense. This is the one place in this post that I will get into official "theory." If I remember correctly in the one essay RH spoke of the potterverse definition of death as involving (on her theory) the separation of body and soul and the soul goes through that veil in the Department of Mysteries. The separation of body and soul is the traditional medieval definition of death but it would seem a bit problematic for all souls to have to go through that particular veil (I suppose it could happen, but I just wonder, if that is the "main" veil how the English MOM came to have it rather than say, the Russian etc). I tend to think of it more in terms of, well, the terms "intra-cosmic" and "extra-cosmic." One of St Bonaventure's criticisms of Aristotle's "unmoved mover" as adequate for thinking about God was that it is not a properly "supernatural" concept, it is solely "intra-cosmic," within this cosmos. If the potterverse definition of death were the separation of body and soul and then simply that the soul leaves this cosmos (the "potterverse proper," as it were), the veil could be simply a special pathway to that "extra-cosmic beyond" - not necessarily the only pathway though. I think it was Kim Decina who was pondering in a comment that the Wizarding World at least does not seem to ... but the dementors kiss seems to me to be worse than death, which is exactly how those such as Lupin describe it. In fact it seems to me like it might be a lot like a Horcrux, at least as far as going "extra-cosmic" is concerned. In other words, in an HC the soul still has an anchor in the material world and death cannot happen because a part of the soul is still anchored in the material world (my own reading is that it is not so much a quantitative balance thing, but rather any part of the soul still having an anchor to material ... at least that seems to me to be Slughorn's explanation of the matter in HBP) . In other words, what I am "theorizing" is that just as memory removal with a wand does not remove the memory entirely, so the DK causes a basic separation of body and soul but, because the souls is still anchored in this world (intra-cosmic) in the dementor, some "residual" soul is left animating the body mildly (kind of like the left over twitching legs when you kill a daddy-long-legs spider or a wasp). Of course there is the deal that you are left with memory in the remaining body, that the self-reflexive capacity is left in the part tied to the body ... bet then, from what I remember one would be left not with all memory or sense of self, only the bad memories. In terms of what I ramble a little bit below here, about hell, it is an interesting question, the language in the Gospels of "losing your soul" and the question of "self-awareness" in hell ... of course a lot of that would be speculation and I hope that I never have any empirical data on it. Now, there are other questions that arise ... like how would you get a soul back out of a dementor so that natural death could occur by the soul being released to go "extra-cosmic"? Kill the Dementor? How? and is that even moral (as Kim Decina would say it is not, and Granger sounds like he might agree ... and they very well may be exactly right)? Could you convert a dementor to give up the souls it has sucked out? And How would you do this on a wholescale level? Rowling's potterverse has Hope, and hope is an eschatological concept, and the place beyond the veil may be "extra-cosmic" but the potterverse itself does not really have the eschatological proper in it (as does Tolkien's Arda, where it speaks of a time at the end when the elves will go from the halls of Mandos and Valinor to join mortal men in where they went in death ... I am not saying this is a bad thing of Rowling's world, just a difference from Tolkien's world) ... so you couldn't really speak, as of yet (and within the 7 book framework, since it seems the series will end with Hogwarts still operating with one of Harry's classmates returning as a teacher) of a "coming time" when all will be set right for sure (Ie all the souls released from dementors and all ... Luna does speak of "seeing them again" but this can be on an individual basis, at death, rather than a general resurrection). In the end I guess all I am saying is that I see possibilities in RH's dementor theory. I'm not sure what all of the ramifications are ... but it seems to me to have possibilities not wholly foreign to the Potterverse as Rowling has written it thus far, and without completely deconstructing it. (Actually what the after existence of one who has been kissed most reminds me of is Hell ... the "loss of one's soul," in parable language ... interesting questions there ... will have to ponder that some more). The Spiral Now, the bringing up of the whole dementors issue was not meant to be just using the RH matter as a springboard to present more arguments for my reading of dementors - there is a directional issue in question and in debate with the more hard-line deconstructionist camp. The way I had Deconstructionism explained to me in Lit Crit class my last semester of undergrad was using the example of a spiral. 2 persons stand on either side of a circle and one tosses out a piece of communication to the other. The "thing" under discussion is at the center of the circle and the circle then becomes a spiral. Which way the spiral goes is the issue of debate with hardcore Decon. What one person says will naturally conjure up additional thing for the other, and they will toss these back, and then in the back and forth the two start to move either inwards (as a traditional/realist understanding would say) or outwards (as a hardcore deconstructionist would say) on the spiral. A good traditionalist understanding of the movement would not say that you ever get to the center of the circle, but I suspect that the attempt to "sell" or con people with the promise of having made it there is one of the strongest driving factors behind the appeal of hardcore deconstructionism. It was either RASHI (Rabbi Schlomo Yitzchaki, 1040-1105) or Nachmanides (1194-1270 ... and if it was Nachmanides he was probably just expanding what he got from RASHI, everybody for a while after RASHI in Rabbinic Biblical commentary was basically commenting on RASHI) who noted that the Hebrew term "BeThoke" which means "in the midst" in the paradise narrative of Genesis 2, is a term of circumspection or circumlocution. It does not mean "in the middle" in a way that you could pin down the exact location - there is a mystery to it, which is the heart of the sacred. (For example, my material above cannot explain why vapormort would not just dissipate the way any other HC soul portion would dissipate when the bond was broken with the physical object, so it must be as Felicity thinks, that there is something unique to the original remaining "core," as it were). So even in a traditional realist understanding of communication being a moving inward on the circle does not presume that we ever, on this side of the veil, reach the dead center ... but it does believe we can get somewhere on an inward progression that is a true communication. Hardcore deconstruction seems to take the path that what Granger calls "postmodern realism" and what I will call below "congruous reconstructionism" is not possible - the text, or any piece of communication, cannot work as communication so the only thing really possible is to deconstruct it and build something wholly other, whatever suits your needs. The issue of discussing tripartite and bipartite anthropology and all that and whether Rowling is one or the other and whether or not the textual evidence on the dementors leans this way or that and all that, is an example of the spiral moving in or out. What is going on I think is that analogies in literature always break down, no matter what. One can look at that as proof of the idea that the spiral always moves outward and pretty soon "the center cannot hold" (I forget who said that though). I choose to take it along the lines of RASHI on the trees, that the analogy breaks down because what is at the center is the mystery of the human person, and you can't pin that type of mystery down so tightly. I of course still have my reading and thoughts that as far as "parts" go the bipartite is closer and that affects my reading of the way Rowling uses the language and suggests to my mind "bipartite" explanations for the phenomena in Rowling's works (since I do believe them to be, not "inspired" and inerrant descriptions of the way things technically are, but very creative images that convey something about the mysterious truth of our existence and life as human beings). I think a hardcore deconstructionist would say that what is at the heart of all human speech is continual antithetical rebellion. There is no real communication and no "congruous" reconstruction ... there is only ever oppression and rebellion in the form of deconstructing the oppressing metanarratives and structures, and then history repeating itself. Rowling as Recon This is where Granger comes in with the idea of "Postmodern Realism." The whole thing is that that idea of a spiral moving outward and the center falling apart is itself a metanarrative, and the fact is that you cannot operate without a metanarrative. The hardcore PoMo line would agree with the fact that you cannot but leads to all metanarratives being equal and the whole thing simply a continual power struggle, whereas "postmodern realism" sees the possibility of a real unity or communion that can be reached that is closer to a real truth, which is where the whole thing of love as the deeper magic comes in. In the end I think the school will survive (as indicated in that interview between POA and GOF, that somebody will come back in the end as a teacher) and with its four houses, but that there will be a new unity. One of the things I liked in Granger's presentation of the material at Lumos was the idea of PoMo-ing the PoMos. At first this might seem like a "stick it to 'em" mentality but I don't think there is necessarily a call for anything combative in it. It is basically the same thing that Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) called for from Biblical Critical Scholars at one point ... to be even handed and apply the same tools of analyses to what goes into their own viewpoint as they apply "what is behind and after" the Biblical authors. Maurice Blondel was a well-noted French theologian writing on the issue of transmission and interpretation of tradition, who was noted for saying that you cannot ever get to that "completely objective" standpoint, you will always be who you are and where you are and have those particular presuppositions from your age working in your thinking, and the best way to move towards truth is to admit those and work as best you can at seeing what might be true in them and what you might need to strip away as a bad prejudice (in terms of "Tradition" they speak of positive developments co-existing alongside "deficit traditions" ... the latter of which would be a another name for "wrong-headed metanarratives"). This is basically along the lines of what Granger is saying in the beginning of his paper when he talks about first starting to ask the question of whether Jo is a PoMo, and thinking "well, how can she not be?" - just by the age she lives in. The Name by which I would call Granger's "Postmodern realism" is "Congruous Reconstructionism" (as opposed to hardcore deconstructionism). We cannot simply return to the "realism" thought of before the Enlightenment and the empiricism and skepticism of David Hume et al. The path ahead involves a reconstruction after the deconstruction, but I would say it involves a congruity with that tradition (I am here just expounding my own thoughts on Granger's, I think he would agree but just didn't put it in exactly this language/frame). For me it is part of that whole thing of how "Grace builds on nature." It can't be that nature simply remains basically unchanged (aka Pelagianism) and it also cannot be that Grace completely deconstructs nature and rebuilds, from the pieces, something unrecognizable. It is a "congruous reconstructionism" (albeit, in the case of Grace and nature, a radical one). In the end you cannot go back past Kant and Nietzsche, Derrida and Foucault - simply go back to the age of medieval Thomism. You cannot simply apply Matthew Arnold's approach of "beauty and truth" (or "truth and light" or "beauty and light" or some combination thereof - it's been a while since I read it) from his Essay in Criticism (1865, 1868) without dealing with the PoMo question. In the end you must come back to Arnold's way of thinking or lose the story as a story enjoyable by a human being, but you must deal with Deconstructionism etc. All of this has happened and there has to be some faith in the possibility moving forward to some real truth (I personally think that the 7 books, in addition to fitting chiastic structure and alchemical structure, also fit a "4 and 3" structure that loosely fits the cardinal and theological virtues of Faith, Hope and Love ... and that in the building up to Harry's ability to love as central in the 7th book at least faintly echoes, "but the greatest of these is love." I think it was Aquinas who talked about how in heaven Faith and Hope will be transformed into knowledge and possession, but love will always be love ... or something like that - I'm paraphrasing loosely from memory) And this is where all of it kind of comes to a head. If the deconstruction of the metanarrative reaches the level of deconstructing the narrative proper to the point that everything your "average" reader gets is wrong, its gone to far and is not able to function as a positive literary communication. If we believe that Dumbledore is so wise that he cannot ever make mistakes, we have bought too far into a metanarrative that even DD himself is opposed to, but if we go to the level of seeing every bit of sympatheia and positive emotion that arises towards him as misguided, the deconstruction has gone to far, as Pauli said, it ruins the story as a story. If the "meaning" discovered by the deconstruction and reconstruction is so alien to that in the first reading experience of a reader who has genuine openness to truth, then something has gone wrong and you have to wonder why even start reading in the first place. In the language that Ratzinger used to the Biblical Scholars, you have to have sympatheia with the material - part of learning from stories, or maybe rather "being enriched," is that there has to be something in the experience of that first reading, where you read it because you get caught up in the characters and their stories, that the "critical meaning" hooks up with... which is what I was saying above about the warm regard that Lupin and Hagrid and others have for Dumbledore and that is part of the building of the warm regard we the reader have for him. That is one of Granger's notes on the whole PoMo thing is not having a "moral," being very wary of anything that smells even remotely like "preaching." One of the things I think about it is that narrative has its own distinct way of relating truth, and it is distinct from the way a discursive reasoning essay does it, and much confusion and bad thinking come from trying too much to force narrative truth into discursive form. Gordon Wenham as a book on OT studies along this line called Story as Torah - meaning NOT "story as a vehicle for moral law" but narrative itself as a distinct mode of communicating the deeper truth on which law should be based. |
Comments on "Disney Does Derrida: John Granger at Lumos 2006; Decons and Red Hens"
Very nice, Merlin.
I love the Minesweeper analogy because Rowling does think in patterns and she is remarkably good at interweaving several genres throughout the series.
As for modern literary theory, I have to say I think it sometimes comes close to being a Dementor’s kiss sucking the joy out of literature. One of the HogPro members from Norway posted this last September giving the “voice of Europe” in the “deconstructionism” debate. I’m with Eco.
“In Europe deconstructionism and Jacques Derrida's linguistic philosophy (or «structuralist semiotics») seem to have a strong influence. Greek «semeíon» means «sign», and «semiotics» is «sign theory». Deconstructionists demand the deconstruction of any message, since they by nature are totalitarian and repressive, and in reality the result of endless plays of language. By consequence all interpretation of texts and signs are equal, and there is no such thing as a «correct interpretation». Consequently there are loads of narratives, but no truths.
Against structuralist semiotics author and philosopher Umberto Eco in his philosophical writings has advocated a strong critisism: Derrida semiotics cannot function outside the philosophic chambers. A pilot running an airplane is using semiotics when he interprets the signs of his instrument panel, basically in the same way as a Bible scholar interpreting the Hebrew or Greek Bible. If the pilot started interpreting his instruments according to Derridea, he would soon crash his plane.
According to Eco there is no way of verifying interpretations in Derrida semiotics. Interpretation is a two-way-process between text and interpreter; nobody can tell whether an interpretation is false or true. Opposing this, Eco defends a three-way-relationship between text, its object and its interpretor. In a three-way-relationship, verification is often possible. A text about sparrows may be polysemic, meaning that several interpretations are possible. But interpreting it about soap instead of sparrows is a verifiably false interpretation.
Traditionally the process of searching for truth is described as similar to following a river in the desert after rain. The river gradually narrows and finally disappears in the sands, and finding the truth is accordingly impossible. But according to Umberto Eco the real situation is totally different. To be human is to be all the time totally surrounded by the truth, it is to live in a lasting bombardment of signs in an incredible variety of rich meaning. Truth is an enormous giant, bombarding us with signs. If we learn to interpret them correctly, they may open the doors and allow us to recognize Truth. Umberto Eco's (and Charles S Pierce's) alternative semiotics is called «pragmatic semiotics».”
Call me simplistic, but I think authors have something to say, and by working within established linguistic conventions, readers are able to construe their meaning. I was thinking just now of the German HP forum thread on “Stoppered Death” I was reading a few weeks ago. The German translates the phrase as “cork death,” and there are numerous verbal changes and shifts that occurred in the German text simply due to the translation, and yet, and yet, those German readers were drawing the same conclusions and having the same arguments about Snape’s ability to stopper Dumbledore’s death as we English readers are.
I don’t know what John means about the reader not being allowed to be pro-Muggle, but I reject the statement on its face (realizing there may be more to it). Muggles aren’t the focus of the Potterverse, so Rowling doesn't include many, but Arthur Weasley is a Muggle-lover who writes Muggle-protection legislation and we justly love him for it. We’re encouraged to admire Hermione’s parents and the parents of all Muggle-born students because of what must be their uncommon forbearance. Various witches and wizards have been noted in Famous Wizard Cards for pro-Muggle activities.
I love your thoughts on the house elves in books 2, 4, and 6; I hadn’t noticed that pattern.
I think Travis’s connection between the OotP under Dumbledore and the Fabian Society (advocating slow, steady change) is the right model to use in understanding Dumbledore. The castle elves want to wear Hogwarts tea towels, but they wear clean tea towels, not the rags Dobby and Kreacher wore with their families. Dumbledore offered Dobby more wages and time off than Dobby was comfortable accepting, so Dumbledore gave him what made him happy. Dumbledore even gave Dobby permission to call him a barmy old codger or something like that, so Dumbledore has taken the first steps, but he’s not about to throw the elves into turmoil the way well-meaning but blundering Hermione would.
The Fountain of Magical Brethren is missing giants, werewolves, merpeople, and dementors because, I suspect, they are creatures that cannot perform magic as wizards do (with a wand), so they aren’t technically the “magical brethren” of wizards even though they are magical creatures. Most werewolves are "poisoned" Muggles (like Fenrir Greyback) not wizards like Remus Lupin; notice that Fenrir didn’t have a wand during the raid on Hogwarts in GBP. Merpeople were afraid of Harry’s wand at the bottom of the lake, and they don’t appear to be able to perform any magic. Giants have no magical powers since they were described as being distrustful of both wizards and magic. Hagrid and Olympe are magical because they are only half-giant (one parent was a witch or wizard). Grawp is pure giant and has no magical ability. Dementors don’t perform magic that I can see; what they do is magical in the sense that werewolves transform by some limited magical property that they do not control. IOW, pure giants, werewolves (unless they were magical prior to being turned into werewolves), merpeople, and dementors could not use a wand to perform spell, make potions, etc., even if they were permitted to have them.
However, elves, goblins, and centaurs do appear to be able to use a wand to perform magic, so they’re part of the fountain of magical brethren even though the laws are currently written to prevent them from using wands. In GF9, Amos Diggory mentioned Clause 3 of the Code of Wand Use: “No non-human creature is permitted to carry or use a wand.” We know from Hermione that elves are prevented from using wands, so we know they are able to use wands. Goblins very likely could used wands at one time, given Harry’s History of Magic OWL question: “In your opinion, did wand legislation contribute to, or lead to better control of, goblin riots of the eighteenth century?” When Hagrid and Olympe visited the giants, they presented a gift of a goblin-made helmet that was described as being indestructible, which logically means “made with magic.” And the fact that “goblin-made” items are rare, old, and expensive in the Potterverse supports the idea that goblins once were permitted the use of wands but that right was taken away from them. Centaurs, as noted, are officially described as half-breeds, and since they're half-human, they likely have wizard blood in them and magical abilities if they chose to use them and were permitted wand use.
I must point out that Lupin was quite clear that the soul is removed from the body after a DK—not part of the soul, but the whole thing. That’s the text, so that has to be the working definition. Second, Lupin says the Dementors are soul-less themselves, so that’s part of the puzzle. As for classifying them, for me, Dementors are dark creatures like boggarts; they are magical creatures in the way that thestrals are magical, but they don’t have the ability to perform magic as with a wand—to cast spells, transfigure items, make potions, etc. We can imagine centaurs, elves, and goblins, doing those things, Dementors? No. So they aren’t the “magical brethren” of wizards and witches. What are they?
On the effect of Dementors: "Dementors are among the foulest creatures that walk this earth. They infest the darkest, filthiest places, they glory in decay and despair, they drain peace, hope, and happiness out of the air around them. Even Muggles feel their presence, though they can't see them. Get too near a Dementor and every good feeling, every happy memory will be sucked out of you. If it can, the Dementor will feed on you long enough to reduce you to something like itself...soul-less and evil. You will be left with nothing but the worst experiences of your life." (PA 10)
On the dementor's kiss: "Oh no," said Lupin. "Much worse than that. You can exist without your soul, you know, as long as your brain and heart are still working. But you'll have no sense of self anymore, no memory, no ... anything. There's no chance at all of recovery. You'll just -- exist. As an empty shell. And your soul is gone forever ... lost." (PA12)
As for the MoM using the Dementors, that, to me, is maybe the primary example of how foolish wizards are. We aren’t short of examples demonstrating the short-sightedness of the MoM, and the idea that they thought they could control the Dementors is one more example of how little they understand their world and the place of witches and wizards in it. As for the idea that people Rowling criticizes seeming to love the books, I have to say she doesn’t condemn everyone in the educational system or government. There are good MoM employees and there are good teachers in this world. That’s one area of disagreement I have with John’s argument (he seems to think she condemns them all); another is that I don’t believe as he does that she spares organized religion (she mainly ignores it, but what she does reference it, the image is not flattering).
I don’t know how the British MoM came to have the Veil. But honestly, this is likely one of those questions that’s just too hairsplitting (like whether the Weasleys pay UK property taxes on the Burrow). Despite the extraordinary detail Rowling outlined before writing the books, she didn’t go to the level of every niggling detail we geeky readers are asking about. I would love to know how Salazar Slytherin managed to place the opening of the Chamber of Secrets on a modern plumbing fixture, but my gut tells me I’m not meant to notice that.
A Dementor can suck the good memories out a person, leaving them only with the bad memories; that’s what happens to prisoners at Azkaban, but that isn’t the same as sucking out their soul. I don’t think a Dementor functions like a Horcrux, because Lupin describes Dementors as soul-less—they don’t have their own souls and they don’t apparently hang on to the souls of the humans they kiss. The souls taken by the Dementor, I contend, go behind the Veil and form an anchor there. At some point, Barty Crouch, Jr. is going to die; his body will give out, and then the remainder of his spirit (which is not his soul) will separate from his body (which will then be a corpse), and he’ll be dead. At that point, I would say, his “third component” (conscious mind) will also pass through the Veil and join the soul.
Dumbledore said that without the remaining fraction of soul that resides within Voldemort’s rebirthed body, he would have no sense of self (which I why I argue that the soul is the essence that enables self-awareness, but not the only “spiritual component” in a human person in the Potterverse).
I have St. Paul backing he up on this, Merlin.
I Thessalonians
5:23. And may the God of peace himself sanctify you in all things: that your whole spirit and soul and body may be preserved blameless in the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Ipse autem Deus pacis sanctificet vos per omnia et integer spiritus vester et anima et corpus sine querella in adventu Domini nostri Iesu Christi servetur.
Let me add that I'm not saying a well-crafted literary work won't support depths of meaning that work on more than one level; but I believe that educated, trained readers will perceive those levels and will be able to discuss them as such. And, of course, the more poetic the language, the richer the meaning.
I fired up my laptop, planning to start a Rowling PoMo essay, and hopefully to finish it tonight (I did a lot of work on PoMo for my Master's thesis last year). I figured I'd check my bloglines first, and lo and behold, it looks like the work's already been done!
I ordered the Lumos CD-ROM today so I could check out what John did. I agree with you entirely, Merlin - an evil or manipulative DD, particularly of the RH type, is over-deconstruction. It gives us no reconstruction.
In any case, I'm going to plug forward with my PoMo essay anyway, and I'll link over here for further (and better, really) discussion.
The thing is, it's completely normal and desirable for the "ordinary reader" to be baffled and confused at this point in a mystery story. If the detective doesn't clarify everything at the end, or the clues don't all link together in a satisfying way when he does, that's when we'll have to worry.
Travis,
Good to hear they have the CD ROM available - lots of good stuff as far as resources and all. In fact, I want to see if they have the past years CD Rom's available ... Peg Kerr's talk on memory referenced her Nimbus 2003 talk that looked pretty good, on the 7 deadly sins and the 7 heavenly virtues in HP. The Malignant narcissist paper has a pretty hefty bibliography, and I'm definitely getting that anthology that Granger mentions on Postmodernism.
Felicity,
don't know what to tell you ...
the "tri-component" just sounds an awful lot to me like over-deconstructing.
Anyway you tack at it I don't think you can pin it down. personally I go with the "Bipartite" as the closest (for the reality of revealed in the Faith/Scripture), if I have to pick a "part" system, because I can think of purely physical beings (inanimate, such as rocks, and animate, such as animals, who, as far as we know their life-forces simply dissipate when extinguished from their bodies) and purely spiritual ones.
Beyond that, I don't think either theory does complete justice ... "bipartite" runs the risks of Appollinarianism and Cartesian dualism.
I guess I always figure if God can be three persons but only one being, why can't, in the image of God in the human, these two natures that are based in what seem to be these 2 realms (physical and spiritual) be wed in something that is positvely exists but is not a mere "component." In truth, the formulation I have heard personally that seems to me to be the closest to the reality of the human person is "a spirit existing in a bodily dimension" - but that admittedly runs somes risks of what you might call being "mono-partite" - which I don't think would be good (seems to me like it might be sort of akin to Sabellianism in the Trinitarian controversy, the heresy that each of the "presons" is only a mask worn by the same one person who is God)
As far as what is in Rowling's text, the way she uses the language and concepts does not, to me, seem clearly to "choose" one side or the other of that debate (which is to me, a mark in favor of the works) ... and like I said, the fact that analogies eventaully break down and that this or that thing, when taken in this way and that can lean this way or that, but this other reference over here somehow seems congruous with the first but also has this nuance of this other fomrulation ... when you come down to it, the thought that you can have a completely objectively ("Scientifically")descriptive anthropology is a little misguided.
As far as Saint Paul goes, all I'll say is that Paul does use three distinct words (well, actually Jerome uses 3 distinct words, but I find it highly unlikely that Jerome's "spiritus," "anima" and "corpus" do not correpsond directly to "pnuema," "psuche" and "soma" in Paul's Greek ... but my Greek NT is currently 400 miles away in a packing bin in an apt in Queens) ... but beyond that, whether he is speaking of them as "components" is very arguable ... the Greek word "soma," in the Hebraic context, is much more of a "relational" concept - the body is the way, or the mode, the person relates to others ... not Descarte's "res extensia" ... body and soul are much closer in that way of thinking than what we now think of as "parts" with "mutually exlusive properties of physical extension."
Beyond that, what does it mean on the positive side, and does it have any distinct ramifications for the "trip vs bip" debate? ... I'm really not sure at this point without studying it more.
Merlin: "the deconstruction has gone to far, as Pauli said, it ruins the story as a story. If the 'meaning' discovered by the deconstruction and reconstruction is so alien to that in the first reading experience of a reader who has genuine openness to truth, then something has gone wrong and you have to wonder why even start reading in the first place."
It's kind of a funny parallel, to my warped and simplistic mind, that Voldemort's soul has been ruined as a soul in the same way as a story can -- by deconstruction. By definition it has ceased to be a soul. The story must remain intact to be a story.
Good verse, Felicity, from 1 Thes -- beautiful phrase "sine querella" which means "without female gorillas" -- no, just kidding!... means literally "without accusation" which seems most likely, but also "without complaint." Voldemort's big complaint was his own mortality, but he wanted to fix that HIS way, not via sanctification (development), but via horcruxes (deconstructions). I said in an earlier post, the seven-step transformational program of alchemy, which could be a parallel to sancification, was the norm that Voldemort rejected in favor of his own, horrible seven-part travesty of a soul.
Somewhere I have a book called "Transformed by Grace" by Dom Wulstan Mork. If I remember correctly, it uses a "tri-partite model" in describing the soul and spirit, but does so rather naturally. I'll dig it out and throw up a post about it. Meanwhile, I'm going to call it a night, but I can't quit imagining Billie Holiday singing:
"Tom-ay-to, Tom-ah-to,
Bi-partite, tri-partite,
Let's call the whole thing off!"
i love that observation of the gradual destruction of the soul that was tom riddle.
it makes me wonder more rather than less (sorry, pauli) about the bi-partite/tri-partite thing, as he obviously still has the ability to observe, plan, feel some emotions etc
i am also musing on what the victim of a dementor's kiss would look like. would they be what we so disrespectfully term 'a vegetable'. as in - just a body? or would they be a ruthless soul-less person who can still interact with the world around them?
what is the difference between receiving the kiss and merely (?) being in the presence of dementors for a long time.
cheers,
jo
On the Trip and Bip thing ... one of the interests for me is the heresies that have developed - of course I have probably mentioned the Apollinarius one too often by now, but on the whole some such as Aloys Grillmeieir, argues that the neglect of the issue of the human soul of Christ was - and he makes a pretty good argument. On the other hand I have heard raving "tripartite" professors take it to a level where gender is all intra-cosmic politics and has absolutely no spiritual value (one proclaiming gleefully/maniaclly "my spirit has no gender!" and thinking "yeah, no s**t, sherlock" ... of course the guy's wife also taught at the school and has her own credibility as aforementioned as a bit of an expert on schools like Decon ... but in regards to the genderless spirit thing, I knew a guy who had her for his undergrad thesis advisor, and he had something in there that it was just to call him on as far as taking the male/female symbolism and tying certain aspects too tightly in the spiritual intepretation etc, but didn't really justify the fact that you could still pretty much read "this makes me puke" written by the prof, even though it had been erased ir crossed out or whatever ... some people from both camps get so wrapped up in it they forget how to be professional ... and in the end a lot of times forget charity - the guy was, to be sure, naively excitable in that instance and needed to be brought back on track, I read what he wrote and it didn't sound like he was being an a**hole ... all I could think was "Sesame Street has been brought to you today by the words 'crone' 'hag' and 'vendetta'" ).
In regards to HP in the matter, I guess RH was the first major place that started me thinking on Trip and Bip here. I guess I still maintain that Bipartite makes the most sense to me, but at this point I may have to state that in terms of "doesn't make the least sense". In other words, if somebody showed me to my satisfaction that this or that image in HP was conclusively tripartite, it might make me feel like the image was a little less rich in texture (simply by the fact that it got "pinned down"), but it wouldn't make me think the works are "inaccurate to reality," necessarily ... like I said, I think at bottom it's a mystery ... to the best of my feel this is one place where ambivalence tension in different instances of the images, ambivalence (rather than multivalence proper) between trip and bip, is actually the better from of literature for conveying the mystery (in other words, just enough detail but not tying it down ... one of the ladies at Lumos was asking about Horcruxes, "why not 9, or 11 or ... why 7? there could be any number and then people would be misguided and never know when it was profitable to attack Voldy himself." and I thought, "nah, there's something to the number 7 in the numerology and all and I think that, while there may be some narrative misdirection, it will be of the type that actually gives the reader meaningful information on both the physical level and the metanarrative/meaning level, and that Harry will be able, at least with help, to have clear data on that, like 'oh! we thought it was this and now we learned it is that'" and about something like the "soul" in the Potterverse I think that if there is ambivalence tension (well, I guess I would say I think definitely there is but it might not all be consciously intentional) that it is limited to the terms "soul" and "body" and terms that are directly tied to traditional concepts of "intellectual soul"/"spirit" such as "mind" and "brain"/"intellect" (brain being a crossover term I guess)
Actually one of the things the whole thing does remind me of is the image Lewis uses in Pilgrim's Regress of the prison watched over by the giant named "the spirit of the age" from the top of his mountain ... and the effect of the prison was that when the sunlight shown through the bars in the door, you would see everyone else transparently, Ie you would get a good view of all their innards etc ... all looking pretty grotesque and horrorish ... the point being that when you begin to deconstruct the human person things become distorted by seeing them in isolation and so on, when you see the person as an integral whole from the outside you see the beauty (hence the reason that definition of "a spirit existing in a bodily dimension" appeals to me most, even though I know that it not work on the technical levels, even in the areas of "technicality" that do not delve into deconstructionist thinking - and there it's kind of back to the whole Artistotelean thing of Harmony vs Unison, and a "monopartite" thing would definitely be unison ... but it does make you wonder when we still haven't gotten down to the basic "building block" matter, at least last I heard - down to something like "sub-quarks" now?).
On the thing with the vegetative soul, sensate soul and intellectual soul:
The classical understanding, as I understand it, is that the "vegetative soul" is simply "the principle of growth" (not simply addition, but a self contained animating principle of life that is able to take matter, such as food or fertilizer etc, and convert it into energy and back again, ie into the matter of its own body ... where the animating priniciple is not "supplied" as with electricity - Aurthur Weaseley's favorite hobby - and which is also why I think fire has been so appealing to the imagination, it has that same thing going of self-sunstaining ... you just put the logs on the fire and it keeps going ... only fire does not animate a body ... but it sure does look very animated :) ).
I would agree, the use of the term "vegetable" of a human being probably has nothing to do with the medieval thought on the "vegetative soul" and it's a very poor choice of how to refer to a person. I think that came up in one of felicity's comments, of somebody having undergone the DK, "no matter how vegetative." I had brought up the "3 types of souls" mainly to avoid possible confusions with what "tripartite" was refering to, in case any others had heard of that, and to clarify what seemed to me to be the aspect they are using it in (ie, they thought, as do I, that plants and animals, like onions and dogs, have souls, but "soul" is, with the exception of the intellectual soul of the human being, or at least this is the way I see it, a thing that is tied to and defined by the material world by definition and dissipates as soon as the principal connection animation with the body is broken ... hence when a tree "dies" it simply stops growing and begins to decay. And the thing about the mandrakes was simply to say, "Cool" because in this day and age you get so much of it being either "trees are people too!" or "hey man, I say burn all of Montana down just to get under the tree-huggers' skin ... I mean, I personally make it a point to throw away at least a ream of paper a day at work, man" so it's cool to see an image that sort of recognizes something in respecting creation and all levels of life and all that, but also recognizes the qualitative hierarchy of life).
As far as the DK victim, if the picture Snape has on his classroom wall in HBP is generally representative I would guess that any type of volitional powers are out of the picture.
FINALLY
On Pauli's observation on (hardcore) deconstructionism and Horcruxes ... it's all in the one line from Felicity and the first book in the HP series.
"There are many narratives but no truth"
"There is no good and evil, only power and those too weak to seek it."
It's all about power in the end
that power quote was quirrel. don't you think it reflects the motivation of the 'dark side' as opposed to the true value in that world?
my own thinking on the bipartate, triparte ("let's call the whole thing off" lalalalala) is currently going along the lines of 'the whole is greater than the sum of the parts'.
if there are 2 (am grasping for vocabulary here) animating forces i am thinking that it's spirit and body and that soul is like a product of that combination.
i know i won't be having any original thoughts (nothing new under the sun and all that) and i'm probably talking out my ar.... inexperience... but it is making sense to me in this context as well.
jo
Good Call on the Fountain of Magical Brethren
I forgot I wanted to say that I really liked Felicity's note on the creatures in the magical fountain and the ability to "do" magic with a wand versus simply "being" magical in a way that is beyond choice. I guess we haven't seen the specific instances with regards to centaurs and goblins with wands but we have seen the evidence that house elfs can use a wand with the questioning of Winky at the world cup and we have seen Dobby do specific magic in the hover charm at # 4 drive and defending Harry from Lucius at the end of CoS and we know Goblins do specific magic with spells and all from their work at Gringott's and I would say that given of the montage in the fountain and the central role Dumbledore has noted of it that the specific grouping is important and that it is more than reasonable to include centaurs in the "doing magic" category.
As far as the way Kim Decina spoke of Dementors as sentient creatures, I guess the verdict is more "still out" than it is with Giants and Werewolves because we have seen those groups able to act and make choices (great note, by the way, on Greyback being muggle - I hadn't thought about that about the specific noting that his death eaters robes don't fit him that well ... I think she means you to overlook it at first and assume it's just his disheveled disposition as a werewolf and choosing to be grungy and being sort of a beefy "rangey" man, but I think it is meant to be a hint drop that any wizards robes do not fit well because he is not a wizard, and thus does not have a wand) ... not having a soul of their own, as noted and not really taking actions that really resemble choices, and seeming to be more creatures of instinct and craving ... I'm not sure dementors could be called "sentient" so I would guess they are in a little different category than giants and werwolves, but I think the key thing is that neither giants nore werewolves choose to be magical, they simply are, and the races in the fountain are sentient about doing magic, they can choose this or that magical action.
The Whole is more than the Sum of its Parts
As for "the whole is more than the sum of its parts" ... I wholeheartedly agree with that line of thinking in a number of different areas regarding humanity. It's a phrase that I have ponered a lot in regards to some disagreeances I have had with some of Kant's examples of his philosophy but have also had pause to think about more thoroughly (his whole "7+5=12" and "the shortest distance between 2 points is a straight line" as examples of "synthetic apriori knowledge") but also in regards to human identity in the context of the contemporary philosophical category of "identity extended through time" and the issue of human eschatoligical "identity" in heaven and how our time-bound existence will fit into that identity. I have also ponered that whole thing of "identity extended through time" as connected to the medieval system of Biblical interpretaion known as the "Quadriga" (4 "senses": the literal, the allegorical sense in the historical first coming of Christ, the "tropological" or moral sense and the "anagogical" or fully eschatological sense") as 4 basic elements of the whole identity of Scripture as the Word in relation to Christ, the true and full Word: the pre-Incarnational for-shadowing in the OT, the historical Incarnation, the (moral) life of the Church/believers as the "Mystical Body of Christ" and then the eschatological fullness - and there too, the whole being more than simply the "sum of its parts" ... really rich concept in that simple phrase.
Backgrounds of Deconstructionism
But, also on the philosophical vein, I was talking with my friend Dom and he had some interesting info on the whole deconstruction thing from his background in modern and post-modern philosophy, in which he is doing his PhD right now. According to him the language of deconstruction began with Heiddeger in the form of a German phrase meaning "de-structuring" and then Derrida picked up with the official phrase "deconstruction" and many ardent post-moderns have since run amock with the whole thing. But in Heidegger's thought the "de-constructing" was not, I guess, so willy-nilly and was for a specific philosophical purpose within his philosophical system and goal. Heidegger had formulated what he saw as "being as such," or the nature of being itself, in the term "dasien" and he would "de-sturcture" his philosophical predecessors to show it at the core of each - in short, Aristotle, Aquinas, Kant etc he would "de-structure" their philosophies to show that when you stripped away the "sturctures" particular to each you wound up, in each case, at the same basic tenets that he was calling "dasein." Whether one agrees with Heidegger or that somebody like Dom's project to fully Christianize Heidegger's philosophy (in saying that what best fulfills Heidegger's philosophy, even by its own self described principles, is to say that "Christ is my dasmann, the 'somebody to be' that truly fulfills my God-given 'dasein' or 'call to be,'" either way it's an interesting piece of history to the whole decon thing.
Kaskait, the Name and the "Nephilim"
Dom and I also had much great discussion on stuff I may comment on over at Kaskait's LJ essay on the name Voldemort when I follow Felicity's advice and get an account there. Dom is ever bent on another project: a viable story rewrite of the Star Wars Prequels - one that is credible (down with all this "materialist" mediclorian stuff :) ) and we were discussing Anakin as a "nephilim" in the from Genesis 6:1-4 (the narrative of the marriages of the sons of god and the daughters of men and the offsping being the nephilim, or the gibborim - which are then noted again in the Numbers account of the 12 spies sent into Canaan)- which is sort of hint-dropped in the Anakin-Palpatine conversation during that funky and wierd air ballet or whatever that was meant to be, the hint that Anakin's birth may have been caused by Palpatine's mentor Darth Plagus, the wise, who could manipulate the force to create life. In Tom Riddle you have a similar sort of thing except Merope would be more a "daughter of the gods" and Tom Riddle a "son of man," and the Salazar Slytherin blood-purity bias making this divide that puts into Riddle Jr, as the heir of Slytherin, a sort of "nephilim" character. I haven't thought about it enough yet but it does seem to interplay with Kaskait's emphasis on the Tetragrammaten power Voldy is seeking.
PS
Oh, yeah I do think the power quote is the 'dark side' - but that is what I am saying about the whoel "hardcore deconstructionism" or what I just called "decon run amock" ... that the fact that what is at the center of the spiral (which spiral itself Dom informed would officially go by the title "dialectic") is a mystery is the truth side and the twisting of the "circumspect" nature of that mystery to say that, as Felicity noted, there are many narratives but no truth, and so you might as well just take advantage of what of it you can and grab what power you can, is precisely the dark side.
Dear Pauli, Brett, Felicity, Travis, and other MugMat friends,
I've just sent my new book, Unlocking Harry Potter: The Serious Reader's Guide, to the friend who is helping me publish it. What a relief! You should know that there are three literary alchemy and three PoMo chapters in the book; the chapter I sent to Lumos in May (the one on their CD) is a draft of the second PoMo chapter.
Do we really need another HP Guide? There are, believe it or not, more than 50 on the market already. What I have tried to do, once again, is answer the question, "Why are these books so popular?" I don't think we've gotten to the answer yet, despite the avalanche of helpers. In my first book, I answered the question in terms of the transcendent elements of the book and probably overstated my case for its explicitly Christian message. This hyperbole served a purpose (ripping the sails of the Harry Haters) but neglected two obvious things.
First, Rowling is not a Christian apologist or evangelical in the way that Lewis and Tolkien were. Whatever you make of her 7/05 interviews, Ms. Rowling was definitely trying (sometimes by protesting too much) to put a distance between her and the Inklings.
Second, by emphasizing the timeless or eternal symbolism within the books, the Christian images taken from the English literary tradition, I necessarily neglected the obvious fact that these books resonate with readers NOW because they are timely at least as much as they are timeless. Ms. Rowling is writing a postmodern novel because she is a woman of her times.
Having said that, and having demonstrated it in the new book, I hope even for those not really familiar with postmodernism, there has to be an intersection of timely and timeless, as in all Great Books. In Rowling's novels, I think this conjunction is the literary alchemy she uses as her essential structure and symbolism.
How? Well, in brief, the heart of alchemy is the "resolution of contraries," usually in the creation of an alchemical androgyn or hermaphrodite in whom the contraries (male/female, subject/object, inner/outer) are resolved, or, in harmonious union. [The Mirror of Erised is important here because, like all mirrors, it destroys the subject/object divide and because it shows the "inner" as the "outer," which in a "happy man" should be the same.] The lead has become gold, its contrary, by the balancing of masculine and feminine tendencies in all physical things.
The aim of PoMo literature is also about a transcendence of opposites, most notably, of the "core" group celebrated by cultural metanarrative and the "constitutive other" ("necessary nigger") of these founding myths. Think Gryffindor/Slytherin and the several good/bad groupings created and reinforced by the Sorting Hat and the House Cup. Dumbledore, the Fabian PoMo linguistics professor standing in as Headmaster, recognizes that it is the "power of love" that is the greatest magic; the battery podes/antipodes have to be connected and resolved for the power to flow. For there to be harmony and union in the nasty Wizarding world, a parallel universe to our blue/red polarized world, the synapse has to be bridged and joined so "inner" and "other" are one.
Both the alchemical artistry and the postmodern themes, in effect, require a double-natured hero, what I call a "Hogwarts Hermaphrodite." Dumbe is one but he is "definitely dead." Snape, Dumbledore's apprentice, is another, a man who is Slytherin on the outside but Gryffindor on the inside (can you say "selfless sacrifice"?), Dumbledore in reverse or his mirror-image.
Three other hermaphrodites of note:
(1) Harry Potter - Joe Gryffindor by birth and Heir of Slytherin by scar Horcrux. The agony of HP5 was watching Harry's Slytherin nature come into its own in ALL CAPS! Read his comments at the end of HP6 and you can see he is now the balanced blend. (FYI: the rubedo of the alchemical work is the manifestation of the stone or androgyn; the change work is done at the end of the albedo.)
(2) Rubeus Hagrid - our favorite half-giant is double-natured in more than his birth right. That flowery apron he wears, his mothering Norbert, and the "training" of Grawp point to this man-monster and Dumbledore-dependent being a man-woman (only Snape in Neville's boggart and at the Christmas feast wears women's clothing).
(3) Lord Voldemort - Are you still wondering about Dumbledore's "triumphant gleam" back in HP4? The alchemist's victory was making the Hollow Man and spiritual vacuum into a love conductor. No doubt Dumbledore and Snape suspected for many years that LV was making Horcruxes (how many spells can there be that make your appearance change?) and Dumbe knew what sort of spell LV would need to re-incarnate. If DD expected LV would use Harry's blood to regain a body, why would this be something to cheer about when it happened?
Because the Heir of Slytherin now had a body with the charmed blood of Joe Gryffindor as its magical substance. Lord Thingy is now an unwilling and unknowing love conductor, another Hogwarts Hermaphrodite. Hence, when he possesses Harry in the Ministry at the end of HP5, he experiences agony that defeats him when Harry has only a loving thought (of his going to Sirius, beyond the Veil). Harry or Snape, "love on legs" in having resolved contraries intentionally or at least with a pure heart, can essentially electrocute Lord Voldemort with love. LV is a conductor with close to zero tolerance for electrical/love current.
Anyway, my point was that the artistry and cosmology of the books (the four element alchemy and the search for the Quintessence) dovetail with the postmodern message of Ms. Rowling. She goes further and offers a traditional and transcendent metanarrative, one of love that cannot have a "constitutive other" or be divisive.
The book has some other fun stuff in it but this I think is the best thing in it. Except for maybe the break-room plot-point discussions about how Harry got that scar-Horcrux or the likelihood that the two potions masters stand in Polyjuice style for the Headmaster pretty much throughout HP6...
Anyway, thank you Merlin for the thoughtful review of my PoMo talk and Pauli for this great website. Time to send out the reviewer's copies.
HogPro John, loving MugMat
Dr John,
Great to hear from you and anxiously awaiting the release of that book and wanting to read it, sounds like some great in depth discussion of the "reluctantly, but aptly, named, piebald author." (just seemd so appropriate, given Lewis' use of it in Perelandra :) and I feel like that myself, which gives definite nuance to Heidegger's idea of "being" as "thrown-ness," being thrown into being who you are)
I'm really looking forward to reading it when it hits the shelf.
Merlin