Showing posts with label Harry Potter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harry Potter. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Harry Potter Project: The Beginning

Spinning Straw into GoldWelcome to the grand beginning of the Harry Potter Book Club!

The project has been in the works since late December when I announced my lofty goals for the year, one of which was to read the entire Harry Potter series and blog about my impressions.  The idea was met with considerable enthusiasm.

Almost five months later, here we are!  Jenna of A Light Inside is acting headmistress of the project, but you can find the discussions headquartered here and over at Cyganeria as well.  There promises to be a lot of fun and games in addition to serious scholarship and close reading, and there should be something for everyone.  I hope you'll join us.

Click on the spell bellow to begin at A Light Inside with a more thorough introduction and insights into Chapter 1 of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone:


Consider it your syllabus to this introductory course in magic.  Then hop back over here for my reflections on the first chapter.  And keep a look-out for the third and final introduction from Masha at Cyganeria toward the end of the week.


Before You Read


Please note that I am reading the American versions because those are the copies to which I have access.  Hence I'll be calling the first book The Sorcerer's Stone, though it's original title is The Philosopher's Stone.  I'd love it if a British reader could share significant differentiations as we go along, however.

Additionally, here are a few things you might like to have for the Harry Potter read-through:

  • some used or cheap copies of the books that you don't mind jotting notes on and stashing into your purse or the glove compartment of your car
  • a small notebook if you can't get access to the above
  • candles for late-night castle reading
  • a Latin-English dictionary for deciphering spells (and making up your own!)
  • a cloak of invisibility for hiding from Muggles while reading
  • wizarding music (soundtrack/playlist--compiled by yours truly--forthcoming)
  • wizard recipes for delicious and subject-appropriate snacks (also forthcoming from Masha!)
  • a mythology or Harry Potter reference book

If there's anything else you think should be on the list, let me know and I'll add it!  Now that that's covered, it's time for . . .


The Beginning


Minaali Haputantri Photography

A wise person once said somewhere that the best place to start is at the beginning.  It's impossible to read the first page, the first paragraph, the first sentence of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone without an inkling of what you're getting into:

Mr. and Mrs. Dursley, of number four, Privet Drive, were proud to say that they were perfectly normal, thank you very much.

Methinks the lady dost protest too much.  Right away, we know this story is going to be out-of-the-ordinary.

"The Boy Who Lived" scores well in my book for first impressions.  It's characterization of a boring, straight-laced, rather self-centered English family is affectionately disapproving and puts me in mind of the children's  books of Roald Dahl and his successor Lemony Snicket.  I agree with Jenna that a children's story that only engages children is not a very good children's story, and this chapter engages the reader's curiosity and imagination.

Jenna mentioned that the wizardry in Harry Potter is a spoof, and this too may account for the immediate familiarity and the ease with which I slid into suspension of disbelief.  Short bearded men in cloaks and bespectacled, black-haired, tight-bunned ladies who turn into cats.  Who doesn't have some fond memory of such things, woven in the background of their childhood so intricately and seamlessly as to be almost invisible?  But it's more than that.  The confidence with which the narration is presented is conversational, a kind of "what you are about to hear are real events" tone of storytelling.  I love that, that awareness of story as story.

As someone trained in literature and an amateur writer myself, I noticed things like simple diction, trite turns of phrase, and tendency to rely on adverbs.  But I've never been a fan of the high-brow literary school of critics--why can't plain but clear writing, as much as beauteous writing, be an effective stylistic choice?--and when I try to imagine HP written in a florid post-modern voice, it looses an essential quality I can't quite put my finger on.  Perhaps because the subject of the story is already eccentric.  The simple writing presents what would otherwise be a fantastical account of events in a fairy tale-meets-the-evening-news mode.  It also gives us a sense of the narrator, of ourselves as readers--again, that story-as-a-story effect--that stronger writing would take away by making the characters too immediate and the story too immediately immersive.  Though, don't get me wrong, I expect to be drawn into it more and more as it moves along and I get to know the characters better.

Cory Godbey

Other first impressions:

This Dumbledore is a stand-up kind of guy.  He's not a Gandalf wizard by any stretch, which is refreshing in this age of copycats.  He reminds me more of your favorite high school teacher who pretended not to know what was going on in his classroom when his back was turned to write on the blackboard, but who would surprise you with a knowing and relevant comment in passing when you least expected it.  You sense depths of knowledge and emotions to which you have not yet been granted access in confidence.

While Dumbledore conjures distance under a reserved silliness, McGonagall keeps us at arm's length with her prickly manner.  One thing in particular I didn't like was her comment about even stupid humans noticing all the strange things going on.  Yet after giving it some thought, and Rowling the benefit of the doubt, I considered the following.

Perhaps we are meant to be drawn into the realm of wizardry from the world of the under-ordinary, in the sense that we readers are confidants--even artists.  Our art is in recognizing the mysteriousness and wonder of existence in a way that sets us apart from others.  It is what makes us readers, seekers of fiction, and friends of the imagination.  Our very act of reading initiates us in a sense, while the Muggles are those of us who fail to recognize and seize upon the type of magic in everyday living; who reject imagination and fiction as children's stories, invaluable to the real world; who go about day by day like Mr. Dursley, unable to fathom that perhaps the homeless man at the street corner is a wise and benevolent wizard, much less a dignified human being.

Maybe the wizards in the universe of Harry Potter are those of us who are not blind to the greater struggle going on, outside our self-satisfied, comfortable, and sometimes mundane lives.  I suspect anybody who can be open to the type of love-magic and truths spoken in Harry Potter, or any fairy tale, would be a wizard within its pages.

Last, you have "the boy who lived."  Jenna makes an astute distinction between "lived" and "survived."  That one word turns the meaning of the entire story.  And while I am worried, with Professor McGonagall, about poor Harry growing up among those atrocious relatives; and a bit distanced by the main character already being introduced as not-an-ordinary-person (how do I relate to that?); I feel a bubbling hope with its source in the little baby left on the front step of number four Privet Drive.  Who sleeps peacefully in the night not knowing how important he is or how his being in the world is a sign of hope to so many; and I am reminded of the dark of early Christmas morning, with dancing stars and strange learned men who show reverence in secret, when another little baby came quietly, unobtrusively, to change everything forever.



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Monday, December 31, 2012

2013

Looking Back


In 2012, we've held our first contest, hosted what we hope to be the first of many Fourth Friday Fairy Tale Prompts, heard about the fairy tale value of Harry Potter, seen a promising adaptation of an old classic, and witnessed the unveiling of a brand new fairy tale publication!

So, what's on the agenda for next year?

Cory Godbey


Looking Forward


Fourth Friday Fairy Tales


When the holidays die down, we'll resume our fairy tale prompts.

As a reminder, the prompts can be used to inspire any original, creative undertaking: be it a piece of music, performance art, or a collage.  It doesn't have to be only poetry and writing!


Contests


So far, SSiG has held one contest, and I'd like to hold more.  However, financing more than one a year poses a problem.  I've considered adding a Donate button to the blog, but am wary about asking readers to trust their money will go right into funding contests and giveaways.  I'd like to hear readers' opinions on this.


The Harry Potter Project


The biggest undertaking of them all.  I've only read the first book in the Harry Potter series, which gives me a strong disadvantage in fantasy and fairy tale dialogue.  And what would be more fun and discussion-spurring than posting about my Potter experience as I'm reading it?

A few things give me pause: Harry Potter has already permeated our culture in such a way that it would be impossible to pick up the books without previous influence.  So I could approach reading in either one of three ways:
1.  Pretend as best I can that I have never heard of the series and try to imagine what my reactions might be if I were encountering the books in pure experience. 
2.  Throw my prejudices and expectations out there as I read, and let the reader determine what is of value and what isn't. 
3.  Do extensive research before and during reading.  Come to the books armed to the teeth with knowledge of sources, influences, and authorial intention.
What do you think?


And More


More book reviews, original fairy tales, and artist spotlights!  What would you like to see more of on SSiG in the new year?


Cory Godbey

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Saturday, September 15, 2012

Guest Post: Harry Potter and the Writer of Fairy Tales

by Jenna St. Hilaire


[Dear readers (all five of you!), I am shamefully unlearned in the ways of Hogwarts, but Harry Potter is such a paragon in our realm of Faerie that I have asked a friend and fellow fairy tale lover to write a guest post on the topic.  Jenna's reflection on J.K. Rowling's books and their significance to and for fairy stories demonstrates both her literary knowledge and imaginative capabilities; two things, I believe, are essential traits of those who wish to restore and honor fairy tales.  Jenna blogs regularly at A Light Inside and is a contributing member of The Hog's Head.  -- Christie]

For those of us who tell stories of faërie and fantasy, J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series might not be the first place we look for inspiration.  After all, the Potter books are written with the common prose of middle-grade literature: humorous but simplistic, not comparable to the poetic language of Tolkien or the lyrical vividness of Robin McKinley or the toe-curling terror of Neil Gaiman or H.P. Lovecraft.  Or even the artistic simplicity of C.S. Lewis. 

But Harry Potter keeps, on some levels, the fairy tale tradition.  Its wizards and witches are dramatic spoofs on the fairy-tale image of the warty, pointy-hatted crone stirring her cauldronful of nasty things in the back of a cave.  Harry’s journeys typically follow three-act structure and often involve magical tasks: fetch the golden egg from under the dragon!  Choose, from an array including poisons and nettle wine, the potion which will help you walk through fire!  Find the cup in which the evil wizard has stored part of his soul! 
Hogwarts coat of arms
The people and creatures of faërie walk the Potter stories.  Ghosts drift through the castle walls.  A basilisk whispers to Harry when no one else can hear.  Monster-loving Hagrid and French headmistress Olympe Maxime are both half-giant.  The Hogwarts founders are witches and wizards who have attained mythic status.  And the Deathly Hallows legend comes from a beautiful fairy tale titled The Tale of the Three Brothers, written by Rowling, based on Chaucer’s The Pardoner’s Tale

From its Gothic themes to its playful use of myth, from its cycles through Campbell’s hero’s journey to its baptismal and sacrificial imagery, Harry Potter’s story is a stunning success in fairy tale terms.  Moreover, its worldbuilding is almost unrivalled, not for its detail—Tolkien has Rowling bested by far there—but for its ability to create an expansive, splendid, glorious realm in the mind of the reader.  Every time someone asks publicly which of all fictional worlds would readers most like to visit, Hogwarts is one of the first and most frequently named. 

Harry Potter isn’t necessarily the first place fantasy writers look for inspiration.  It was, however, quite literally that for me.  Though I’d written stories since I could hold a pen and had read Narnia and The Lord of the Rings, only when Harry came around did I return as a writer to the world of fairies and magic that I’d mostly left in my childhood with the Disney films.  Since then, every story I’ve written, and many of those I’ve read, have come from that world.  I’ve loved the magical journey so much that last year, I even re-told a classic fairy tale myself. 

My path into the dark forest and the fairy realm began in earnest at number four, Privet Drive, Little Whinging, Surrey.  Naturally, it was only a place to begin.

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