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Harry Potter: Pro and Con reprinted with permission from Jan/Feb 2002 Catholic Insight magazine, http://www.catholicinsight.com/ In our December
2001 issue, we brought Father Lazare's critique of the Harry Potter
books. In this edition we conclude our presentation with several other
views. DAVID DOOLEY The Catholic World Report for April 2001 carried a long article by Michael OBrien entitled "Harry Potter and the paganization of Childrens Culture." In the 19th century, he wrote, there appeared a trickle of books that redefined Christian symbols and occult themes in a favourable light. Until then, witches and sorcerers were consistently portrayed as evil; more and more material began to appear which attempted to shift the line between good and evil. The "white witch," the pet dragon, and the wise wizard became familiar figures. During the last quarter of the 20th century the trickle became a torrentapplauded by some writers who told us that this was a long overdue broadening of our horizons. In his book Amusing
Ourselves to Death, Neil Postman has described how television has
reshaped our society, OBrien writes. The volume of information
fed to the mind increased while our ability to sort and The impact on youth OBrien points out that 76 million copies (today over 100 million) of the Potter books have been sold, and that they have been translated into 42 languages. They are going to be a major influence on the perceptions of the coming generation, and therefore they invite an appraisal. He does not deny that J. K. Rowlings creation is witty, thought-provoking, and entertaining, and that it expands the childs imagination. Further, she has introduced an electronically addicted generation to the pleasures of reading. The stories are packed with surprises which will enchant almost all readers. Nevertheless,
he contends that the charming details are mixed with the repulsive
at every turn. Ron casts a spell which rebounds on himself, making
him vomit slimy slugs; the ghost of a little girl lives in a toilet.
Harry is a special
boy, hated by evil incarnate and destined for greatness. But he blackmails
his uncle, uses trickery and deception, "breaks a hundred rules,"
lies to get himself out of trouble, hates his enemies, and lets himself
be provoked into seeking revenge against them. Lip service is paid
to morality, but nowhere in the series is there any reference to a
system of moral absolutes against which actions can be OBrien concludes that the Harry Potter books are dangerous: We would not give our children fiction in which a group of "good fornicators" struggled against a set of "bad fornicators," because we know that the power of disordered sexual impulse is an abiding problem in human affairs. . . . Why, then, have we accepted a set of books which glamorize and normalize occult activity, even though it is every bit as deadly to the soul as sexual sin . . .? Is it because we have not yet awakened to the fact that occultism is in fact a clear and present danger? CHESTERTON REVIEW In a special issue of the Chesterton Review on "George MacDonald and the Sacramental Imagination" (February/May 2001), Father Ian Boyd included a symposium in which seven contributors gave their opinions of the Harry Potter series. They were asked to say something about the significance of the books and to decide whether or not they were products of what MacDonald called "a wise imagination." Good versus evil Sheridan Gilley
put them in the context of the English public school story, and pointed
out that the theme of sex is as muted as it is in older British school
fiction. He also maintained that it is difficult to take the "Evangelical
Protestant" complaint against the witchcraft too seriously: "Christianity
is simply absent from the books . . . . But to condemn this fantasy
world would surely be to damn all the vast mass of fantasy Salutary Steven S. Tigner is equally convinced that the Potter books show "a Right Imagination." While the confrontations between good and evil are sometimes violent, he writes, Rowling has been careful never to muddy the distinction between what is pretend and what is real. He concludes that "The Harry Potter books are salutary forces advancing the divine order of things. And they are delightfully engaging." Inez Fitzgerald Storck, on the other hand, entitles her piece "J. K. Rowling: A Wounded Imagination." A wise imagination, she declares, is primarily one capable of distinguishing between good and evil, and judged by this criterion, the Potter volumes fall short. Traditional values are replaced by individualism and New Age beliefs, including the occult. Children will be overstimulated by the continual succession of gimmicks, spells, and other forms of magic. The knowledge of magic functions as a kind of gnosticism: people with magic skills tend to live apart, and carefully guard their secrets from the uninitiated. Due to their many flaws in the presentation of good and evil, the books must be seen as the product of a wounded imagination, and they will render more difficult the assimilation by children of the mind of Christ, the divine imagination. Gertrude White says that she does not know whether J. K. Rowling is a fan of Chesterton, but that if he were alive he would be a fan of hers; he would enter into the world she creates with approbation and delight. The delight would be for the imaginative details which are the heart of these stories; God, it has been remarked, is in the details, and the truth of this observation was never better illustrated than here. "Magic" is he title of a play Chesterton wrote, and he insisted all his life that the world is magic and has been given to us by a Magician. Revives reading Writing on "Harry Potter and History," Owen Dudley Edwards writes that by now children should be deep into illiteracy and books close to oblivion, but Rowling has turned the tide. The book is back, and she above all other authors has done it. Swiftian in her
satire, Edwards writes, she posits realms of fantasy in whose intricacies
we can wallow, while elegantly lampooning extremely terrestrial and
unmagical human conduct. Her only failures are when A major reason
for the Harry Potter success is that it appeals to very old stories
of a child miraculously transposed into a hidden life where his identity
is withheld from neighbours. It lies deeply within Christian As to Harry Potter himself, Edwards says, the best may be yet to come. He is not yet a full character, though he certainly has his share of unpredictability. We know that we have more growth to see. Chesterton speaks of "the soul of a schoolboy waiting to be awakened by accident," which is what Harry discovers in himself when he first gets the call of the witchcraft school. Rowling has kept her Harry as a schoolboy, and his friends Ron and Hermione are even more convincingly well-rounded schoolchild characters. But the heat will turn as they move into adolescence, and then it will be necessary for her to remember Chestertons distinctions. "For among her glories is her quintessence of Chestertonism." Against the culture of death Finally, Leonie Caldecott in "Harry Potter and the Culture of Life" addresses OBriens question of whether the books seriously undermine our value system. "Overall," she says, "I cannot help feeling that a writer who calls the arch-enemy of all that makes life worth living "Voldemort" cant be a million miles away from a Pope who sums up the ills of the modern world with the term culture of death.'" And it is against this culture of death that the Harry Potter books stand. "She proves how vital the imaginal world can be when it comes to putting flesh and bones on moral ideas." Chesterton speaks in an essay on "Magic and Fantasy in Fiction" of the net of St.Peter and the snare of Satan as presenting two kinds of magic in which we can become enmeshed. And he says that every deep or delicate treatment of the magical theme "will always be found to imply an indirect relation to the ancient blessing and cursing, and it is almost as vital that it should be moral as that it should not be moralizing." One of the most interesting aspects of the Harry Potter phenomenon, then, is that it should have been found worthy of serious discussion by a group of eminent critics like those who took part in the Chesterton Review symposium. Evidently there
is plenty of room for argument about the books' merits and their morality. Published by LifeSiteNews.com Your contributions to LifeSiteNews.com would be most helpful! |