he/they | đđ¤đđ¤ | master procrastinator | Fuck JKR
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Arkadijxpancakes - Arc - Tumblr Blog
With Sirius Orion Black, fans are following a naming tradition that was quite common at the time he was born, especially in the middle and upper classes. A baby would receive a given name and one or more middle names. The middle names were often named after relatives to honor them. Usually, a firstborn son would receive his father's name as a middle name. His brothers would receive the name of other relatives, like grandfathers and uncles. Female names could be handled in the same fashion.
Rowling (who has no middle name) mimicked this tradition, when picking her pseudonym "J. K. Rowling". She chose the "K" after her grandmother, who was named Kathleen.
This tradition appears frequently in the books. Harry's full name is Harry James Potter, after his dad. Albus Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore was named after his father Percival. The Weasley kids were also named in that manner. (William Arthur, Percy Ignatius and Ronald Bilius are in the books and Ginevra Molly comes from supplemental material. We don't know the middle names of Charlie, Fred and George, but one would assume that they have middle names as well.)
Most importantly: Sirius' brother Regulus is named the same way. His full name is Regulus Arcturus Black. Arcturus was his grandfather.
Fans are extrapolating from there. It would be odd for Sirius to not have a middle name (especially as his younger brother has one) and his father's name is an obvious choice. So, he becomes Sirius Orion Black.
When it comes to Percy/Percival, fans are also extrapolating. This time, they use the naming conventions of the Weasleys. The majority of them has a pretty traditional and fairly long given name, that gets shortened into a nickname. (So William becomes Bill, Charles becomes Charlie, Ronald becomes Ron and Ginevra becomes Ginny.)
"Percy" sounds like a nickname, too, so people assume that it is a nickname and Percival would fit as a given name. This also started before OoP was published, so people didn't know that Percy was his given name, not just a nickname. It just carried over from there.
(Edit: Fred sometimes gets a similar treatment. I definitely saw "Frederick" or something like that as a given name before)
okay so i noticed that a lot of people in the fandom tend to elongate the canon names of characters (sirius black -> sirius orion black, percy ignatius weasley -> percival ignatius weasley), is this like a conscious choice to deviate from canon or is it just how the fandom has grown to name the characters?
i am Confused but the names are usually pretty cool so
Harry Potter should have been a quidditch player for a few years and then switch to teaching is a hill I will die on.
Like let him enjoy his youth and not fighting for his life for once. Let him work in a place that he feels safe in and was his first home.
This was an interesting read. It definitively fits the picture I have of the family and their dynamic. I guess Percy turned into Molly's Golden Child, once Bill and Charlie left. But he didn't become her Golden Child for who he was as a person, but for what he did for her: mostly for becoming Prefect and later Head Boy (Just like Bill!) and probably also for keeping the twins in check while they were at Hogwarts. And the moment he dared to have a differing opinion (one she and Arthur did not agree with), he immediately slipped from the pedestal she put him on.
Side note: When he became Prefect, it was Arthur who made the big present (Hermes), not Molly.
Ive just realized Percy calls Molly Mother a lot but with Arthur its Dad, not always but you see that appear more than mum.
Iâve always thought that Percy was never close with Molly. She may have favored him and while I think he wanted to make her proud and be seen as perfect Iâd think he find it suffocating with her at times. With constantly being compared to his siblings, even if it was a good light for him I feel like that would add to his stress of having to be perfect.
Iâm sure he loves Molly but I think it was far more difficult for Percy to fight with father than hurt his mother
I never noticed this, so of course, I had to go back and search, and you are absolutely right. There is not one instance in the entire series where Percy calls Molly 'mum' and yet there are many instances of him calling Arthur 'dad'.
This realization sent me down the rabbit hole, so I went back and analyzed all of Percy's interactions with Molly, and... there's literally no textual evidence that Percy was Molly's favorite.
We, as a fandom, tend to buy into this idea because of how upset Molly was at Percy disowning the family, but now that I'm looking back, I genuinely think she would have reacted the same way if any of the kids had left the way Percy did. In fact, I realized upon rereading that Molly's "love" of Percy was more like a love of Percy's prefect and Head Boy status.
Here is every interaction with Percy & Molly.
There is only one in Book 1:
âCanât stay long, Mother,â he said. âIâm up front, the prefects have got two compartments to themselves ââ âOh, are you a prefect, Percy?â said one of the twins, with an air of great surprise. âYou should have said something, we had no idea.â âHang on, I think I remember him saying something about it,â said the other twin. âOnce ââ âOr twice ââ âA minute ââ âAll summer ââ âOh, shut up,â said Percy the Prefect. âHow come Percy gets new robes, anyway?â said one of the twins. âBecause heâs a prefect,â said their mother fondly. âAll right, dear, well, have a good term â send me an owl when you get there.â She kissed Percy on the cheek and he left. Then she turned to the twins.
The kiss on the cheek is not indicative of any close bond, because we also see later on that:
Mrs. Weasley kissed all her children, then Hermione, and finally Harry. He was embarrassed, but really quite pleased, when she gave him an extra hug.
As for her excitement with Percy being a prefect? Here was her reaction to Ron being a prefect:
âHis badge,â said Fred, with the air of getting the worst over quickly. âHis lovely shiny new prefectâs badge.â Fredâs words took a moment to penetrate Mrs. Weasleyâs preoccupation about pajamas. âHis . . . but . . . Ron, youâre not. . . ?â Ron held up his badge. Mrs. Weasley let out a shriek just like Hermioneâs. âI donât believe it! I donât believe it! Oh, Ron, how wonderful! A prefect! Thatâs everyone in the family!â âWhat are Fred and I, next-door neighbors?â said George indignantly, as his mother pushed him aside and flung her arms around her youngest son.Â
She's excited that her child got recognition - and by extension, she got recognition. It had nothing special to do with Percy.
There are no interactions between Percy and Molly in Book 2, but we do have this conversation:
âBeds empty! No note! Car gone â could have crashed â out of my mind with worry â did you care? â never, as long as Iâve lived â you wait until your father gets home, we never had trouble like this from Bill or Charlie or Percy ââ âPerfect Percy,â muttered Fred. âYOU COULD DO WITH TAKING A LEAF OUT OF PERCYâS BOOK!â yelled Mrs. Weasley, prodding a finger in Fredâs chest. âYou could have died, you could have been seen, you could have lost your father his job ââ
She mentions Bill & Charlie first, and she only focuses on Percy after Fred does.
There are two interactions between Percy and Molly in Book 3, one of which was Molly asking Percy to look out for Harry, which doesn't imply any sort of favoritism, and the other was:
âI said, thatâs enough,â said Mrs. Weasley, depositing her shopping in an empty chair. âHello, Harry, dear. I suppose youâve heard our exciting news?â She pointed to the brand-new silver badge on Percyâs chest. âSecond Head Boy in the family!â she said, swelling with pride.
Yet again, we see Molly more excited about the accomplishment of being Head Boy, and she is quick to point out that Percy is the second one in the Weasley family, because of course that's a status symbol.
There is only one interaction between Percy and Molly in Book 4, and it's not a positive one:
âYour father hasnât had to go into the office on weekends since the days of You-Know-Who,â she said. âTheyâre working him far too hard. His dinnerâs going to be ruined if he doesnât come home soon.â âWell, Father feels heâs got to make up for his mistake at the match, doesnât he?â said Percy. âIf truth be told, he was a tad unwise to make a public statement without clearing it with his Head of Department first ââ âDonât you dare blame your father for what that wretched Skeeter woman wrote!â said Mrs. Weasley, flaring up at once.
She's definitely not showing favoritism here - she doesn't even let Percy get away with saying a mildly offensive thing about Arthur.
In fact, in Book 4, when the whole Weasley clan returns from the disaster at the Quidditch World Cup, and Molly has been worried sick, she hugs Fred & George first - she doesn't even address Percy.
It isn't until Percy leaves the family that Molly focuses on him, and I really do think she would have done that for any of her children.
To summarize, there is no actual evidence to prove that Percy was Molly's favorite child - in fact, there's more evidence proving that he wasn't! đą
So thank you for this comment, because it seriously made me reevaluate my thoughts and headcanons about their relationship, which was fun! đ
âTis Autumn
I agree, the conflict between Harry and Ron really isn't resolved. They barely scratch the surface of their conflict, when they "resolve" it. They fix the issue that has bubbled to the surface (Ron's feelings about Hermione), but they don't fix the iceberg underneath. They never do.
There are multiple opportunities for Ron to learn from and overcome his insecurities, but the narrative never really allows him to have lasting character development. Every time one of those conflicts comes up, he starts to have some growth - just to revert to his factory settings (I like how you mentioned this for Percy and I do think, this applies to other characters as well, including Ron), once the inciting incident is dealt with.
It's the same for the conflict between Arthur and Percy. Because, yes, their differing opinions on how to deal with the news about Voldemort did spark their argument, but it isn't really the reason they argued and it's also not the reason Percy went no-contact with his whole family for three fucking years.
So Percy apologizing for being wrong might solve the inciting incident, but it also doesn't solve the conflict underneath. Him fighting Thicknesse also doesn't do that. Because, in the end, the conflict wasn't really about Voldemort being back or about Dumbledore.
It was about their dysfunctional family dynamics (not just between Percy and Arthur, but also between Percy and everyone else). It was about Percy's status as golden child of the family (and how fragile that status really is) and about them not really knowing each another. And it was also about Percy growing into his adult self, while separating who he wants to be from what his parents want him to be. One could also make a point about how this conflict was about their socioeconomic status and the discrimination that came with it. But all of this was completely dropped, after the conflict was introduced in Order of the Phoenix. From that point onwards it's just about Voldemort being back and about Percy being wrong about it.
And the "resolution" in Deathly Hallows treats the conflict as such. Percy stumbles into the situation, apologizes (he's basically groveling), mom and dad hug him, Fred and George make some jokes, the conflict is solved, all is well.(1) And afterward, Percy really does go back to his factory settings.
And it's not just Ron and Percy this is happening to. Rowling seems to have an aversion to writing character development. Harry does grow as a character, but he's basically the only one. She attempts to give Snape some development, but it's mostly of the "and he was good all along!" kind of development, where he doesn't really change at all. Draco starts to become a better person, but she never really commits to a redemption arc (probably, because she hates Drarry shippers...)
(1) Side tangent: I just - once again - realized how fucking Christian the series (especially Deathly Hallows) really is. I wonder if Percy's arc was supposed to be read that way. Him denouncing JesusHarry and leaving his congregationfamily, just to realize the error in his ways to return just in time for the final battle and his congregationfamily welcoming him back with open arms ... There would be no character development needed, after that.
Guys who Cry in the Harry Potter Books (and Why)
Men do 30% of the crying in the Harry Potter books, even though they represent 66% of the characters (and that's pretty much as expected).* Iâm interested in why the crying happens though, and what it says about the characters. For the ladies, crying is neutral - they all cry, and for all sorts of reasons (tired, frustrated, stressed, emotionally overwrought...) Bellatrix, Augusta Longbottom, Ginny, Tonks⌠all cry. *Hermione* cries thirty separate times over the course of the books.Â
Male crying though, that's something that gets mocked (usually by Slytherins.) Pansy calls Neville a âfat little cry baby,â and after Ritaâs article (falsely) describes Harry crying, Draco comes in with âWant a hanky, Potter, in case you start crying in Transfiguration?â Of course thereâs also âDâyou think [Hagrid]âll cry when they cut off his hippogriffâs - â right before Hermione slaps him. So making fun of guys for crying is bad right?Â
Letâs get into it.Â
1 : Crying because of a death
The most âacceptableâ reason for male crying. This happens a lot, we are definitely not supposed to think any less of the guys who do it. Mostly it happens *right* at the moment of death, or maybe at the funeral. The exception is Harry, who cries in Book 3 after talking about hearing his parents dying (although the narrative voice DOES let us know that heâs kind of embarrassed about this...)
âHarry suddenly realized that there were tears on his face mingling with the sweat. He bent his face as low as possible, wiping them off on his robes, pretending to do up his shoelace, so that Lupin wouldnât see.âÂ
Then he cries again in Book 7, while visiting his parents' graves. But itâs definitely still crying over a death. Just one that Harry takes a little bit longer to process.Â
Crying over a Death: Full Breakdown:Â
Amos Diggory: 1 (Cedricâs death)Â
Arthur Weasley: 1 (Fredâs death)
Harry Potter: 3 (Hedwig, Lily, James)
Rubeus Hagrid: 4 (Dumbledore, Buckbeak, Aragog, Harry)Â
Argus Filtch: 1 (thinks Mrs. Norris is dead)Â
Xenophillius Lovegood: 1 (thinks Luna is dead)Â
Fillius Flitwick: (thinks Ginny is dead)Â
Ron Weasley: 1 (Dumbledoreâs funeral)Â
Elphias Doge: 1 (Dumbledoreâs funeral
2: Crying because of Pain
Youâd think this one would also be acceptable. But⌠it really isnât? Dudley cries when Vernon hits him (but Harry doesnât.) Peter Pettigrew cries when he cuts off his own hand, Saw style, but it gets framed as blubbering weakness. Pettigrew framed SO pathetically for the entire resurrection scene - and honestly, for the entire rest of the series.
(Which is strange when you think about it. Like objectively, Pettigrew did GOOD. Sure he only likes Voldemort because heâs powerful, but so do most of the Death Eaters, thatâs nothing special. Peter found Voldemort, resurrected him single-handedly (ha.) Found Bertha Jorkins, i.e. the reason Voldemort was able to plan his comeback. Obviously he has god-tier bluffing and lying abilities, as well as enough willpower to cut off a limb. Being able to turn into a rat would make him a really useful spy. Also his spell, the one that killed thirteen muggles and destroyed a street? Most magic we see does not have a blast radius like that. Either heâs extremely powerful, or he somehow rigged the whole street up to blow beforehand? Maybe he planted magical bombs everywhere, and triggered them after luring Sirius to the right place. Either way, Peterâs formidable. But somehow his job is to hang out and be Snapeâs servant? (Is it because heâs not cute? Is this JKRâs fatphobia rearing its ugly head? Unclear.)
Our last guy crying in pain is Book 1 Neville, after he breaks his wrist during flying lessons. He also âsniffs,â while walking into the Forbidden Forest for detention, which *might* count as crying? But really, Neville cries surprisingly little. We get a lot of âlooked as though he might cryâ and âon the verge of tearsâ... but that's not actually crying. And I think thatâs becauseâŚÂ early-books Neville, yes weâre supposed to see him as a little pathetic. But definitely not as pathetic as Dudley or Pettigrew.Â
3: âChildlikeâ Crying
Sometimes the people who cry are literally little boys. This is also okay. No one is going to judge infant Harry for crying when Voldemort is in the house, or little Severus for crying when his parents are fighting. Interestingly, when Myrtle is talking about Draco crying in her bathroom, Harry assumes sheâs talking about someone much younger:Â
âThereâs been a boy in here crying?â said Harry curiously. âA young boy?âÂ
But of course, when an adult is crying in a childlike way, it immediately becomes⌠pathetic. Again we have Pettigrew, who âburst into tears. It was horrible to watch: He looked like an oversized, balding baby, cowering on the floor.â In the Horcrux cave, crying Dumbledore is described âlike a child dying of thirst.â Which is also meant to be pathetic, but in more of a âHarry has to be the adult nowâ sort of way. Also, the potion seems to have made Dumbledore mentally regress back to his youth, so itâs *closer* to a literal âchild cryingâ moment.Â
(I considered putting Dumbledore drinking the potion in the âpainâ section, but at least in the book I think itâs clear heâs mostly in emotional rather than physical pain.)
Where this gets messy is with the house-elves. House-elves are not children, but they are presented as childlike. They are small and in-your-face, direct even though their problem-solving tends to be very convoluted/not especially logical. I like the present-tense, no pronouns way they speak, but I canât deny it is kind of baby-talk adjacent. And⌠house elves are *really* emotional. Dobby, Kreacher (and Winky) cry a LOT. If I had to guess, I would say JKR likes treating house-elves as childlike so itâs more of a surprise when it turns out that one of them was behind everything. But considering that they are slaves, it is gross considering that one of the main real-world justifications for slavery was âslaves are childlike, and unable to take care of themselves.'
Thereâs also Hagrid. With seventeen separate instances of crying, Hagrid easily cries more than any other guy in the Harry Potter books. And⌠well⌠heâs also presented as oddly childlike. He seems much more like Harry and Ronâs contemporary than a peer of the other professors - which is weird, since if he went to school with Voldemort fifty years ago, heâs in his sixties now. But still, heâs helpless in the face of criticism, heâs comically out of his depth whenever he deals with the Ministry, heâs constantly letting things slip or drastically misjudging danger levels. The first three books use âHagrid gets in trouble, the gang has to bail him outâ as a plot point, and in Book 4 his sideplot with Madame Maxime gets treated like a schoolboyâs first crush, with all these jokes about him wearing suits that donât quite fit, and trying and failing to style his hair. Not to mention, we know sheâs flattering him because she wants insider info on the Tournament. But he doesnât know that.Â
4. Crying because of Sports
Oliver Wood cries when Gryffindor wins the Quidditch cup. That's all.
And that brings us to our stragglers. The only non-childlike guys who cry for reasons other than death, pain, or sports are as follows:Â
Harry Potter: 1 instance of crying
Draco Malfoy: 2 instances of crying
Severus Snape: 2 instances of crying
Albus Dumbledore: 4 instances of crying
Horace Slughorn: 1 instance of crying
Letâs see whatâs going on here.Â
Harry Potter
Dumbledore had weakened himself by drinking that terrible potion for nothing. Harry crumpled the parchment in his hand, and his eyes burned with tears as behind him. Fang began to howl. He clutched the cold locket in his hand so tightly that it hurt, but he could not prevent hot tears spilling from his eyes
Thereâs a lot going on in this moment: Harry is tired, frustrated, disappointed, overwhelmed. But even though it is a complex moment, probably the main emotion is still Harryâs attempt to process Dumbledoreâs death, now that he finally has a second to do so. So this honestly could have gone in the âCrying because of a deathâ category. Itâs just different enough that I want to specially call it out.Â
Draco Malfoy
We hear about Draco crying once from Myrtle, and then see it first hand:Â
Malfoy was crying â actually crying â tears streaming down his pale face into the grimy basin.
The narrative takes a second to let us know that he was ACTUALLY CRYING, just to hammer in that this is something unexpected and not-normal. I think I want to attribute Dracoâs tendency to cry - and cry because heâs overwhelmed, scared, lonely - to the characterâs slight femme coding. What can I say, he cries for ""girly"" reasons. And so does Snape!
Severus SnapeÂ
âSnivellusâ is clearly a nickname meant to evoke the idea of âcrybaby,â since âsnivelingâ is a synonym for crying. We also get this:Â
Snape was kneeling in Siriusâs old bedroom. Tears were dripping from the end of his hooked nose as he read the old letter from Lily.Â
Crying over Lilyâs letter could count as crying over a death⌠but since heâs crying over a letter, not over a grave or her body (like in the movie), Iâm going to say that heâs probably crying because of guilt, emotional overload, or love (especially because he rips the âlove Lilyâ off the end of that letter.) Like Draco, Snape might be getting little bit of femme-coding here. Heâs the mean-girl type of bully (versus the mean boy) He cries, he threatens to poison people, which is something we only see women (and Draco) actually doing in these books. Idk, heâs an odd one who JKR clearly has very complicated feelings about.Â
Albus DumbledoreÂ
I was actually really surprised that Dumbledore cries as much as he does, and at such unusual times! He cries when he sees Snapeâs doe patronus - because of love or just because heâs emotionally overwhelmed. He cries all through the Horcrux cave, primarily because of guilt. He cries twice during the Kingâs Cross Station vision-quest, once because of his complicated feelings about Harry while he asks for forgiveness, and once over ⌠Grindlewald.
âThey say he showed remorse in later years, alone in his cell at Nurmengard. I hope that it is true. I would like to think he did feel the horror and shame of what he had done. Perhaps that lie to Voldemort was his attempt to make amends . . . to prevent Voldemort from taking the Hallow . . .â â. . . or maybe from breaking into your tomb?â suggested Harry, and Dumbledore dabbed his eyes.
And okay. JKR announced that Dumbledore was gay just a few months after book seven was published, and I think she was folding in deliberate queer-coding as early Book 6. My proof of that is Dumbledore's increased emotionality - as we can see, itâs pretty unusual for men to cry in the Harry Potter books because theyâre feeling âsofterâ emotions like love, regret, stress etc. Itâs something she associates with femininity, and Iâm sure she associates gay guys with femininity as well (I mean, thatâs a very common thing to do.)
Thereâs also this interesting passage from Book 6:Â
This younger Albus Dumbledoreâs long hair and beard were auburn. Having reached their side of the street, he strode off along the pavement, drawing many curious glances due to the flamboyantly cut suit of plum velvet that he was wearing. âNice suit, sir,â said Harry, before he could stop himself, but Dumbledore merely chuckled.
Now, this is subtle. Wizards out and about in the muggle world often wear unusual colors like purple and emerald green. However. That adjective flamboyantly is only used one other time in the entire series, to describe Fudgeâs hand gestures. But here, it is used to describe an outfit, a purple velvet suit which is honestly a little bit Oscar Wilde. And âflamboyantly gayâ ⌠those are two words often heard together.Â
Also, correct me if Iâm wrong, but I am pretty sure this is the only opinion about clothing Harry ever expresses aloud. And, I think @niche-pastiche hit the nail right on the head when were talking about this and they said, "'Nice suit, sir,' said Harry, before he could stop himself," is SO the response of a young adhd boy in the early 2000s trying not to say "thats gay."Â
Horace Slughorn
Horace Slughorn cries at Aragogâs funeral, not really out of grief for Aragog, but mostly out of a maudlin sense of togetherness, nostalgia, and camaraderie. And⌠I do think we have one more slightly morally ambiguous femme-coded guy on our hands? Like Dumbledore, Slughorn is very much a flashy dresser, with shiny hair and gold buttons on his waistcoat. He loves treats and candies (hey⌠so does Dumbledore. Theyâre the only adults with a sweet tooth like that.) He loves fancy dinner parties, and is well-connected without being ambitious the way Lucius is. He also (like Draco) is aligned with pureblood-supremacy, but hyper avoidant of violence and confrontation. Except for the Harry example, I think Iâd be comfortable with calling all of these last few instances âFemme-Coded Crying.âÂ
* Methodology - My list of 208 Harry Potter characters comes from TV Tropes, which had the most complete list. I am excluding characters from Cursed Child and the Fantastic Beasts Films.Â
In order to find instances of crying, I searched for the words âcried/cry/cryingâ âtearsâ âsobâ and âsniff.â I counted each crying episode as one, even if crying was brought up multiple times throughout the scene. I made the fairest call I could whenever I hit a âthe crying intensifiedâ or the âthe tears restarted,â but I mostly judge pretty conservatively when Iâm ringing up data.
I think @wisteria-lodge is right. Hogwarts and the Ministry probably have a standardized procedure for this. It would just be weird for the Ministry to hand out a rare magical item to a random thirteen-year-old, if there wasn't already a precedent for this. And yes, at this point in the narrative, Hermione is just a random thirteen-year-old, at least for the Ministry. Yes, smart and studious, but still just a random thirteen-year-old. And a muggle-born at that. With other students, they might have given out time-turners because they are attached to important names or families. But Hermione is a complete newbie without anyone who could vouch for her except her head of house.
Hogwarts/the Ministry handing out time-turners under certain circumstances, would explain both: Why Hermione got one in the first place and how other students achieved their unrealistically high O.W.L. counts.
Hermione got a time-turner, because McGonagall knew how to acquire one for her. McGonagall knew that the Ministry had time-turners in stock and she also knew how to request one (and she was confident enough to do so). In my opinion, it would be really odd for a teacher to have that knowledge, unless there is precedent.
It's a little different with Dumbledore, of course. He definitively knows about shit like this. However, unless this is a common procedure, he had no reason to get one for Hermione. He's not a seer, after all. I don't think he knew that the solution to the evil shenanigans of that book was to staff Hermione with a time-turner. It is more likely that he seized the opportunity when it presented itself.
It would also explain how characters like Bill and Percy (and probably Barty Jr.) were able to achieve the amount O.W.L. they did. And if they actually got time-turners, that would set a precedent for Hermione getting one too.
The reasons why we don't know anything about other students with time-turners are quite simple.
The first reason is demonstrated by Hermione: She was required to keep the time-turner a secret in order to get one. Students who are not trustworthy enough would probably not get one.
The second reason is the perspective. We see the story from Harry's point of view. He isn't interested in taking any more courses than he already has. While he is a good student, he isn't really interested in going above and beyond academically. Additionally, people like Percy and Bill have simply no reason to talk to him about this.
All other explanations would require extra steps for this whole thing to work.
It would be pretty weird, if this was a one-time thing for a muggle-born third year. Especially, because this would require the Ministry to play along as well. (And why would they?)
If Dumbledore had foreseen that Hermione would need a time-turner at the end of the year, it would have massive implications on the other books. (As it is, Dumbledore is smart and great at playing 4D chess with both his enemies and his allies, but foresight is out of his wheelhouse. Could he see the future, it would make some of his already pretty iffy decisions even worse. Especially when you look at his treatment of both, Harry and Riddle.)
Could people take O.W.L. without taking the corresponding courses first? Maybe. You can apparently take your GCSE privately, and O.W.L. are just the wizarding version of this. Still, we don't see anyone doing this. Had this been an option, Hermione probably would have done this with muggle studies, but she didn't.
Of course, the real answer to this is: Rowling's writing is simply not that deep. She wanted to write a book with time travel, so she wrote a book with time travel, consequences be damned.
(By the way: If we really want to poke holes in this, a good follow-up question would be "If Hermione got a time-turner at thirteen so she could get more courses than she could handle, who got one next? Are there still time-turners floating around, because some Hogwarts student in 1995 was just a tiny bit megalomaniac?")
Lowkey feel like Percy Weasley had a time turner during his school years.
Is it possible to do 12 classes basically in a year when they all seem to be year round?
The Great Longbottom Bully chronicles: friendly fire edition
What started as a humble Draco stan's attempt to re-evaluate his involvement with the oft-bullied Neville has quickly become a sentient behemoth of epic proportions (see: pt.1 & pt.2).
In this section, I will examine the unkind ways in which Neville is treated, both by the narration and by his own friends.
It came from inside the house (if by "house" we mean the author)
I always felt like, in the first books, Neville is treated rather callously in order to fit the stereotype of the go-to comic relief guy, but I was never able to articulate just why I felt this way. As I went though the books for the purpose of this exercise, I paid close attention the language used to describe him, starting with his physical description.
It's well documented that JKR uses fatness as a visual shorthand for a character's failings: from Vernon and Dudley Dursley all the way to Peter Pettigrew, her fat characters are portrayed as either comedically evil or somewhat pathetic (and sometimes both). The plus-size character she is perhaps kindest to is Molly Weasley and even then her fatness is used to place her in the archetype of the Mama Bear. In keeping with this theme - wherein a character can't just be fat because sometimes people are fat - one of the characters that gets this treatment is Neville, and it's done in order for him to better fit the stereotype of the clumsy oaf.
Up until the sixth book Neville is described as round faced and pudgy. He doesn't sit, he heaves himself, and in doing so he squashes things, often to comedic effect. Neville is clumsy and uncoordinated and his fatness is used in conjunction with that to really drive the point that he's not to be taken seriously home.
We can also see the role Neville is meant to play in the story by the way his emotions are portrayed: Neville spends his first 4 years at Hogwarts in a constant state of comically exaggerated fear.
I tried cataloguing all the descriptors used to indicate Neville's tone and I had to give up in shame because JKR seems to have gone ham on the thesaurus in order to signal Neville's anxiousness and timidity in increasingly creative ways; nevertheless here's some interesting factoids:
the verb used most often to describe Neville's tone is squeak (by a large margin) followed by choke, sob and moan.
Neville's most common state of mind is frightened - he speaks fearfully, he cowers, he is terrified - followed closely by sad - he speaks miserably, tearfully, unhappily - and anxious - he is jumpy, nervous, tremulous; he is twice "close to a nervous collapse".
When the narrative shifts to a more serious tone, around book 4, we see a sudden drop in the usage of these descriptors. As Neville's role in the story becomes more important, we notice the disappearance of what were once the hallmarks of his personality. All of a sudden, Neville is no longer forgetful and clumsy as apparently those traits cannot coexist with his new heroic persona (Neville 2.0. if you will). I would call this character growth if Neville retained at least some if his previous mannerisms; as it stands Neville's growth ends up reading more like a personality transplant (not unlike what happens to Ginny).
We can also observe this shift in character by the way his friends and peers interact with him, which brings me to the next section:
With friends like these, who needs enemies?
HARRY POTTER
Harry is generally kind to Neville but the way his kindness is presented often reads like condescension:
(PS, Neville tries to do Harry a solid and ends up joining him in detention)
Prior to OotP, their conversations are often superficial in nature and very short. Additionally, Harry does not seem to want to hang out with Neville a whole lot and often goes out of his way to avoid him.
(PS, Harry would like to learn wingardium leviosa without Neville, thanks)
It must be noted that, since the books are mostly told from Harry's point of view, many of the uncharitable descriptors used for Neville could also be attributed to Harry. It's an assessment I somewhat disagree with since the language Harry uses in his (explicitly stated and delineated) thoughts is often less harsh than the narration's.
BONUS HARRY WTF:
(from PoA, Harry is imagining how Sirius must have killed poor poor Peter)
This is one of those Harry remarks that kind of straddles the line between genuine character assessment and authorial dickishness. At this point in the story Harry doesn't know that Peter is a traitor and a murderer so, by imagining him to be Neville-like, Harry lets us infer that they are both to be seen as hapless and bumbling individuals. JKR does know who Peter really is, though, and she makes the deliberate choice of comparing the two.
RON WEASLEY
Ronald Bilius Weasley is not exactly known for his tact, there's no two ways about it. Furthermore, as our everyman character, it often falls on him to illustrate the status quo with his observations. From Ron we get gems such as:
(from PS)
+ BONUS HARRY
(Harry's corresponding nightmare in PoA)
The thought of Neville Longbottom on a broom strikes fear in the heart of many, it seems. Neville's accident in PS's flying lesson and the ensuing chaos seem to be a core memory for the Gryffindors.
(CoS, Ron tries to make Hermione feel better about her muggleborn status by putting Neville down)
This sentence is important because it helps establish Neville's role among his peers. Not only it seems to be an universally acknowledged fact that Neville is hopeless as magic, it is socially acceptable for his classmates to say so.
and
(GoF, Ron makes sure we know that Neville is on the lowest rung of the Hogwarts social ladder)
This scene serves a dual purpose: yes, Ron is once again indicating that we're supposed to infer that Neville is an uggo and a loser, but he's doing so because he's secretly miffed that Hermione has someone to go to the Yule Ball with that isn't him. Ron contains multitudes.
(PS, Neville tries to enforce curfew, the golden trio has no time for rules, Snape is up to evil!)
I put this scene last, despite it occurring during PS, because it perfectly encapsulates what seems to be the general Gryffindor attitude towards Neville during the first books: Neville may be a hopeless dullard but he's their hopeless dullard, as such Gryffindors are the only people allowed to dunk on him (because they're Gryffindors and therefore inherently Good). Speaking of which:
GRYFFINDORS
Here's more excerpts that plainly show just what Neville's place among his fellow Gryffindors is:
(PS, Draco just cursed Neville)
This incident is treated as funny by everyone except Hermione (you go girl). The only problem Harry & co. seem to really have with what happened is that it's Malfoy who did the cursing, again showing that when a malicious act comes from a Gryffindor it's funny and also a prank but when it comes from a Slytherin it's bullying (here's a novel idea: why not both?).
and
(OotP, the twins are such pranksters LOL ROFLMAO)
See? It's ok if the mean-spirited joke comes from a Good Guy, why, Neville even joins in the laughter! How often must have this happened to Neville for him to have learned to laugh the embarrassment away? I wouldn't put such a big emphasis on this type of friendly fire if it happened in the context of a solid friendship based on mutual respect but what we actually see in the books is that these "pranks" happen to Neville whilst he's still treated as somewhat of an outsider. These instances happen before the introduction of Neville 2.0 (now with more courage!), not after.
Just like with his gran's (and Snape's) bullying, both the language used to describe Neville and the opinion of his peers change completely once Neville 2.0 drops. From book 6 onward Neville is part of the hero squad and thus he can no longer be subject to ridicule. Up until then, though, we are clearly meant to laugh at Neville's expense and call me a party pooper but I find this to be rather mean spirited.
To cleanse our palates, I'd like to add a bonus section:
âď¸ The congratulatory gold star award for being a Decent Person âď¸
This award goes to Hermione Jean Granger who, despite not being exactly known for her tact and delicacy, manages to constantly treat Neville with kindness and compassion, especially when he needs it the most:
and
(GoF, Barty Crouch jr. has just traumatized Neville by showing him the curse that ruined his parents' minds forever)
You go girl, and thank you for your service.
this started as the study of a picture i took of the greenery near the place i usually park my car. then i added petra, then i finished it for her birthday.
The additions are awesome, yes! I completely forgot about Sirius. It is interesting to see, how this scene compares to others.
When it comes to Percy, I'm still surprised how subdued his crying in that scene is. Because, yeah, Rowling does respect him less. She also has a tendency to write him in a pretty feminine manner. It's still a stark contrast to his mother, however. She gets mentioned just before the quoted scene and is described as bursting into tears. This is the whole exchange:
Mrs. Weasley burst into tears. She ran forward, pushed Fred aside, and pulled Percy into a strangling hug, while he patted her on the back, his eyes on his father.
âIâm sorry, Dad,â Percy said.
Mr. Weasley blinked rather rapidly, then he too hurried to hug his son.
âWhat made you see sense, Perce?â inquired George.
âItâs been coming on for a while,â said Percy, mopping his eyes under his glasses with a corner of his traveling cloak. âBut I had to find a way out and itâs not so easy at the Ministry, theyâre imprisoning traitors all the time. I managed to make contact with Aberforth and he tipped me off ten minutes ago that Hogwarts was going to make a fight of it, so here I am.â
It's a pretty sharp contrast between the woman (who shows her emotions freely, but is depicted as kind of unreasonable for this) and both men (who suppress their emotions). I also wonder what this says about their conflict. It doesn't really feel solved, to me.
Guys who Cry in the Harry Potter Books (and Why)
Men do 30% of the crying in the Harry Potter books, even though they represent 66% of the characters (and that's pretty much as expected).* Iâm interested in why the crying happens though, and what it says about the characters. For the ladies, crying is neutral - they all cry, and for all sorts of reasons (tired, frustrated, stressed, emotionally overwrought...) Bellatrix, Augusta Longbottom, Ginny, Tonks⌠all cry. *Hermione* cries thirty separate times over the course of the books.Â
Male crying though, that's something that gets mocked (usually by Slytherins.) Pansy calls Neville a âfat little cry baby,â and after Ritaâs article (falsely) describes Harry crying, Draco comes in with âWant a hanky, Potter, in case you start crying in Transfiguration?â Of course thereâs also âDâyou think [Hagrid]âll cry when they cut off his hippogriffâs - â right before Hermione slaps him. So making fun of guys for crying is bad right?Â
Letâs get into it.Â
1 : Crying because of a death
The most âacceptableâ reason for male crying. This happens a lot, we are definitely not supposed to think any less of the guys who do it. Mostly it happens *right* at the moment of death, or maybe at the funeral. The exception is Harry, who cries in Book 3 after talking about hearing his parents dying (although the narrative voice DOES let us know that heâs kind of embarrassed about this...)
âHarry suddenly realized that there were tears on his face mingling with the sweat. He bent his face as low as possible, wiping them off on his robes, pretending to do up his shoelace, so that Lupin wouldnât see.âÂ
Then he cries again in Book 7, while visiting his parents' graves. But itâs definitely still crying over a death. Just one that Harry takes a little bit longer to process.Â
Crying over a Death: Full Breakdown:Â
Amos Diggory: 1 (Cedricâs death)Â
Arthur Weasley: 1 (Fredâs death)
Harry Potter: 3 (Hedwig, Lily, James)
Rubeus Hagrid: 4 (Dumbledore, Buckbeak, Aragog, Harry)Â
Argus Filtch: 1 (thinks Mrs. Norris is dead)Â
Xenophillius Lovegood: 1 (thinks Luna is dead)Â
Fillius Flitwick: (thinks Ginny is dead)Â
Ron Weasley: 1 (Dumbledoreâs funeral)Â
Elphias Doge: 1 (Dumbledoreâs funeral
2: Crying because of Pain
Youâd think this one would also be acceptable. But⌠it really isnât? Dudley cries when Vernon hits him (but Harry doesnât.) Peter Pettigrew cries when he cuts off his own hand, Saw style, but it gets framed as blubbering weakness. Pettigrew framed SO pathetically for the entire resurrection scene - and honestly, for the entire rest of the series.
(Which is strange when you think about it. Like objectively, Pettigrew did GOOD. Sure he only likes Voldemort because heâs powerful, but so do most of the Death Eaters, thatâs nothing special. Peter found Voldemort, resurrected him single-handedly (ha.) Found Bertha Jorkins, i.e. the reason Voldemort was able to plan his comeback. Obviously he has god-tier bluffing and lying abilities, as well as enough willpower to cut off a limb. Being able to turn into a rat would make him a really useful spy. Also his spell, the one that killed thirteen muggles and destroyed a street? Most magic we see does not have a blast radius like that. Either heâs extremely powerful, or he somehow rigged the whole street up to blow beforehand? Maybe he planted magical bombs everywhere, and triggered them after luring Sirius to the right place. Either way, Peterâs formidable. But somehow his job is to hang out and be Snapeâs servant? (Is it because heâs not cute? Is this JKRâs fatphobia rearing its ugly head? Unclear.)
Our last guy crying in pain is Book 1 Neville, after he breaks his wrist during flying lessons. He also âsniffs,â while walking into the Forbidden Forest for detention, which *might* count as crying? But really, Neville cries surprisingly little. We get a lot of âlooked as though he might cryâ and âon the verge of tearsâ... but that's not actually crying. And I think thatâs becauseâŚÂ early-books Neville, yes weâre supposed to see him as a little pathetic. But definitely not as pathetic as Dudley or Pettigrew.Â
3: âChildlikeâ Crying
Sometimes the people who cry are literally little boys. This is also okay. No one is going to judge infant Harry for crying when Voldemort is in the house, or little Severus for crying when his parents are fighting. Interestingly, when Myrtle is talking about Draco crying in her bathroom, Harry assumes sheâs talking about someone much younger:Â
âThereâs been a boy in here crying?â said Harry curiously. âA young boy?âÂ
But of course, when an adult is crying in a childlike way, it immediately becomes⌠pathetic. Again we have Pettigrew, who âburst into tears. It was horrible to watch: He looked like an oversized, balding baby, cowering on the floor.â In the Horcrux cave, crying Dumbledore is described âlike a child dying of thirst.â Which is also meant to be pathetic, but in more of a âHarry has to be the adult nowâ sort of way. Also, the potion seems to have made Dumbledore mentally regress back to his youth, so itâs *closer* to a literal âchild cryingâ moment.Â
(I considered putting Dumbledore drinking the potion in the âpainâ section, but at least in the book I think itâs clear heâs mostly in emotional rather than physical pain.)
Where this gets messy is with the house-elves. House-elves are not children, but they are presented as childlike. They are small and in-your-face, direct even though their problem-solving tends to be very convoluted/not especially logical. I like the present-tense, no pronouns way they speak, but I canât deny it is kind of baby-talk adjacent. And⌠house elves are *really* emotional. Dobby, Kreacher (and Winky) cry a LOT. If I had to guess, I would say JKR likes treating house-elves as childlike so itâs more of a surprise when it turns out that one of them was behind everything. But considering that they are slaves, it is gross considering that one of the main real-world justifications for slavery was âslaves are childlike, and unable to take care of themselves.'
Thereâs also Hagrid. With seventeen separate instances of crying, Hagrid easily cries more than any other guy in the Harry Potter books. And⌠well⌠heâs also presented as oddly childlike. He seems much more like Harry and Ronâs contemporary than a peer of the other professors - which is weird, since if he went to school with Voldemort fifty years ago, heâs in his sixties now. But still, heâs helpless in the face of criticism, heâs comically out of his depth whenever he deals with the Ministry, heâs constantly letting things slip or drastically misjudging danger levels. The first three books use âHagrid gets in trouble, the gang has to bail him outâ as a plot point, and in Book 4 his sideplot with Madame Maxime gets treated like a schoolboyâs first crush, with all these jokes about him wearing suits that donât quite fit, and trying and failing to style his hair. Not to mention, we know sheâs flattering him because she wants insider info on the Tournament. But he doesnât know that.Â
4. Crying because of Sports
Oliver Wood cries when Gryffindor wins the Quidditch cup. That's all.
And that brings us to our stragglers. The only non-childlike guys who cry for reasons other than death, pain, or sports are as follows:Â
Harry Potter: 1 instance of crying
Draco Malfoy: 2 instances of crying
Severus Snape: 2 instances of crying
Albus Dumbledore: 4 instances of crying
Horace Slughorn: 1 instance of crying
Letâs see whatâs going on here.Â
Harry Potter
Dumbledore had weakened himself by drinking that terrible potion for nothing. Harry crumpled the parchment in his hand, and his eyes burned with tears as behind him. Fang began to howl. He clutched the cold locket in his hand so tightly that it hurt, but he could not prevent hot tears spilling from his eyes
Thereâs a lot going on in this moment: Harry is tired, frustrated, disappointed, overwhelmed. But even though it is a complex moment, probably the main emotion is still Harryâs attempt to process Dumbledoreâs death, now that he finally has a second to do so. So this honestly could have gone in the âCrying because of a deathâ category. Itâs just different enough that I want to specially call it out.Â
Draco Malfoy
We hear about Draco crying once from Myrtle, and then see it first hand:Â
Malfoy was crying â actually crying â tears streaming down his pale face into the grimy basin.
The narrative takes a second to let us know that he was ACTUALLY CRYING, just to hammer in that this is something unexpected and not-normal. I think I want to attribute Dracoâs tendency to cry - and cry because heâs overwhelmed, scared, lonely - to the characterâs slight femme coding. What can I say, he cries for ""girly"" reasons. And so does Snape!
Severus SnapeÂ
âSnivellusâ is clearly a nickname meant to evoke the idea of âcrybaby,â since âsnivelingâ is a synonym for crying. We also get this:Â
Snape was kneeling in Siriusâs old bedroom. Tears were dripping from the end of his hooked nose as he read the old letter from Lily.Â
Crying over Lilyâs letter could count as crying over a death⌠but since heâs crying over a letter, not over a grave or her body (like in the movie), Iâm going to say that heâs probably crying because of guilt, emotional overload, or love (especially because he rips the âlove Lilyâ off the end of that letter.) Like Draco, Snape might be getting little bit of femme-coding here. Heâs the mean-girl type of bully (versus the mean boy) He cries, he threatens to poison people, which is something we only see women (and Draco) actually doing in these books. Idk, heâs an odd one who JKR clearly has very complicated feelings about.Â
Albus DumbledoreÂ
I was actually really surprised that Dumbledore cries as much as he does, and at such unusual times! He cries when he sees Snapeâs doe patronus - because of love or just because heâs emotionally overwhelmed. He cries all through the Horcrux cave, primarily because of guilt. He cries twice during the Kingâs Cross Station vision-quest, once because of his complicated feelings about Harry while he asks for forgiveness, and once over ⌠Grindlewald.
âThey say he showed remorse in later years, alone in his cell at Nurmengard. I hope that it is true. I would like to think he did feel the horror and shame of what he had done. Perhaps that lie to Voldemort was his attempt to make amends . . . to prevent Voldemort from taking the Hallow . . .â â. . . or maybe from breaking into your tomb?â suggested Harry, and Dumbledore dabbed his eyes.
And okay. JKR announced that Dumbledore was gay just a few months after book seven was published, and I think she was folding in deliberate queer-coding as early Book 6. My proof of that is Dumbledore's increased emotionality - as we can see, itâs pretty unusual for men to cry in the Harry Potter books because theyâre feeling âsofterâ emotions like love, regret, stress etc. Itâs something she associates with femininity, and Iâm sure she associates gay guys with femininity as well (I mean, thatâs a very common thing to do.)
Thereâs also this interesting passage from Book 6:Â
This younger Albus Dumbledoreâs long hair and beard were auburn. Having reached their side of the street, he strode off along the pavement, drawing many curious glances due to the flamboyantly cut suit of plum velvet that he was wearing. âNice suit, sir,â said Harry, before he could stop himself, but Dumbledore merely chuckled.
Now, this is subtle. Wizards out and about in the muggle world often wear unusual colors like purple and emerald green. However. That adjective flamboyantly is only used one other time in the entire series, to describe Fudgeâs hand gestures. But here, it is used to describe an outfit, a purple velvet suit which is honestly a little bit Oscar Wilde. And âflamboyantly gayâ ⌠those are two words often heard together.Â
Also, correct me if Iâm wrong, but I am pretty sure this is the only opinion about clothing Harry ever expresses aloud. And, I think @niche-pastiche hit the nail right on the head when were talking about this and they said, "'Nice suit, sir,' said Harry, before he could stop himself," is SO the response of a young adhd boy in the early 2000s trying not to say "thats gay."Â
Horace Slughorn
Horace Slughorn cries at Aragogâs funeral, not really out of grief for Aragog, but mostly out of a maudlin sense of togetherness, nostalgia, and camaraderie. And⌠I do think we have one more slightly morally ambiguous femme-coded guy on our hands? Like Dumbledore, Slughorn is very much a flashy dresser, with shiny hair and gold buttons on his waistcoat. He loves treats and candies (hey⌠so does Dumbledore. Theyâre the only adults with a sweet tooth like that.) He loves fancy dinner parties, and is well-connected without being ambitious the way Lucius is. He also (like Draco) is aligned with pureblood-supremacy, but hyper avoidant of violence and confrontation. Except for the Harry example, I think Iâd be comfortable with calling all of these last few instances âFemme-Coded Crying.âÂ
* Methodology - My list of 208 Harry Potter characters comes from TV Tropes, which had the most complete list. I am excluding characters from Cursed Child and the Fantastic Beasts Films.Â
In order to find instances of crying, I searched for the words âcried/cry/cryingâ âtearsâ âsobâ and âsniff.â I counted each crying episode as one, even if crying was brought up multiple times throughout the scene. I made the fairest call I could whenever I hit a âthe crying intensifiedâ or the âthe tears restarted,â but I mostly judge pretty conservatively when Iâm ringing up data.
Reading List: September
The start of the month was all about Drarry Hurt/Comfort fest (recs are here), oldschool Marauders era fic (wolfstar, starcest & jily) and quite a bit of HP character meta, linked at the end. Then I started a reread of Captive Prince so I wanted fic. â¤ď¸ denotes favourites.
>> August recs <<
Captive Prince
đđź The Tall Kingdom I Surround by yekoc (Damen/Laurent, E, 3,7k)
The first time it happened, in the midst of battle preparations at Karthas, Damen had dismissed it as a momentary lapse. Laurentâs voice, issuing curt orders, and his own involuntary reaction: nothing more than force of habit, the instincts he had trained into himself, deliberately, in order to survive.
Nikandros had noticed then, and had let it go with the circumspect silence of a kyroi to his king. That was as it should be, Damen thought. It was not worth discussing. It was not even worth thinking about.
An exploration of the private, intimate power dynamics post canon. I love the thought of Damen
đż Bright as Lightning by blacktofade (Damen/Laurent, E, 33k)
Laurent, Prince of Vere, has always been promised to Damianos, Prince of Akielos.
Lovely arranged-marriage fic where Laurent comes to Akielos to fall in love and uncover plots.
đ§ (Not) Meant For You by Holly_Golightly (Damen/Laurent, background Ancel/Berenger E, 151k)
Laurent is just trying to keep himself together and forget about what happened. Damen is trying to keep the press at bay and ignore the scandalous headlines. Auguste isnât trying at all.
When Laurent sends a hookup text meant for his ex to his brotherâs worst enemy, he unlocks a door to their shared pasts that might have been better left closed. With secrets, lies, and betrayals threatening to bring everything crashing down, Laurent has to decide how much heâs willing to risk and whether or not itâs a price he can afford to pay for his chance at a happy ending.
Modern nobility AU with high-octane emotions, blindingly hot smut, toxic exes, drama and secrets, a (very) complicated Damen & Auguste friendship, but an eventual happy end for all.
HP
𪜠So You Sprouted Wings by @hoko-onchi-writes (Drarry, E, 8k)
Like human puberty, Veela puberty can come with its own pitfalls. Uh-oh! Is that a mood swing? Veela hormones are twice as strong as their human counterparts, so you may find yourself dizzily cheerful in the morning and despairing your wretched existence in the afternoon. Donât worry. Itâs all normal. Itâll smooth out over time. Healing sexual touch can help!
â¤ď¸đť Opus by Spessartine (Regulus/Sirius, E, 4k)
âPlay for me,â says Sirius.
Mesmerising, shivery prose. So sparse yet it made my brain thrum and my breath catch. Their dynamic is so sharp and aching, and the description of Reg playing violin... jesus.
đ Just Like Me by shaggydogstail (Sirius/Regulus, E, 2k)
Regulus hates Sirius. Or maybe he wants to be Sirius. Or maybe he just wants Sirius.
đ Loam by adistantsun + art by dustmouth (Wolfstar, Teddy, T, 7k + drawings)
Round a bend on Swanston Road, the house slips out from between the trees like it's playing hide and seek.
Teddy wants to know more about his father. So he goes digging.
đ Hiraeth by llassah (Wolfstar, M, 5k)
Hiraeth, noun. Welsh. A feeling of yearning to return to a place that may never have existed. An earnest desire.
During the first rise of Voldemort, Remus gets into the spying game. No one told him it would be quite this difficult to lie for a living.
đ A Fearsome Business by canis m. (Wolfstar, T, 20k)
Sirius lays low at Lupin's
I used to love lay low at Lupin's fics. This one is a good representation of that sense of fragile hope.
â¤ď¸đ° The Last Enemy: The Howling Nights by CH_Darling (Jily, T, 208k)
Itâs 1975 and war is simmering beneath the surface of the Wizarding world...but at Hogwarts, itâs magic as usual as the fifth years prepare for their O.W.L.s amidst politics, pranks, and other poor choices.
Severus Snape wants to prove his worth. Lily Evans wants a fresh start. James Potter wants Lily Evans, though no one is more surprised by this than him. Sirius Black wants to write himself a new story. Remus Lupin wants to survive the next moon. Peter Pettigrew just wants to keep up.
But as tensions bubble over, sides will be chosen, friendships destroyed, families parted, and paths forever altered.
I'm so impressed with how easily this slots into canon and how real (and true to canon) all the POV characters feel. I especially enjoyed Lily, Remus and Sirius.
Meta
Gentleman Monster: How Remus's Marginalisation and Comparitive Privilege Made Who He Is by @ashesandhackles
Fred&George vs. James& Sirius and their different sense of "mischief" by @elvendorx
Barty Crouch Jr and Barty Crouch Sn: like father, like son by @artemisia-black
Yes. The Weasleys had too many kids. An analysis. (Part 1 of 2) by @arkadijxpancakes
Everything on this HP meta list compiled by @remus-poopin or these masterlists of ashesandhackles's and artemisia black's meta posts.
So, picture this:
Here I am, sat in an internet-less room, twiddling my thumbs and waiting for time to crawl ever so slowly by. For lack of a better alternative, I start flipping through the pages of Chamber of Secrets and I notice A Thing.
"My, how peculiar" I say to myself, fully intending to let The Thing be, but alas; time moves slowly, boredom persists and, not unlike the tell-tale heart, The Thing calls to me.
"Come," it beckons, "notice me further". "Compile some data" it begs, "that's surely the most productive way to pass the time"; like a moth to a flame, I am caught.
This, dear reader, is how I found myself tallying all the different ways the word "mudblood" is used in canon. So gird your loins and let me introduce you to
The Mudblood Chronicles, or what's in a name?
part 1: methodology
Since the purpose of this exercise is to analyse the use of the term "mudblood" as a slur, I'm not going to count the times in which the word is not being used with malicious intent. Throughout the books this happens on several occasions, those being:
during the course of the narration (it happens once in the context of "everyone present knew mudblood was a very offensive term")
when Harry uses the term, since it only happens when he either recalls someone else saying it (one time with Draco and once with Snape) or he's forbidding Kreacher from using it (twice).
when Ron uses it; it happens once to explain the slur's meaning and once (in conjunction with Ginny) to demand Kreacher stop using the term.
when someone is quoting themselves. Draco quotes himself to Dumbledore once ("you care about me saying mudblood when I'm about to kill you?"; incidentally, it's also the last time he ever utters the word)
I am counting instances in which a muggleborn character uses the term to refer to themselves, since it happens in the context of reclaiming the insult and I am interested in who the author chooses to highlight thusly.
part 2: the results/ WHEN
The word "mudblood" and its plural "mudbloods" are used as an insult a total of 62 times in the Harry Potter books. Here we can see the book by book breakdown:
Unsurprisingly, The book where "mudblood" is used the most ( a total of 34 times) is Deathly Hallows since it takes place during a war about muggleborns. Chamber of Secrets, where the term is introduced, follows with 10 mentions, after which is Order of the Phoenix (7 mentions), followed by Goblet of Fire (6 mentions) and Half-Blood prince (5 mentions). The term "mudblood" is not used in either Philosopher's Stone or Prisoner of Azkaban.
part 3: the results/ WHO
So who is our biggest culprit?
Draco Malfoy is our uncontested lead, having both the advantage of appearing in all books and of orbiting around our narrator. Both Bellatrix and Kreacher make a good showing, with Bellatrix's 6 times being especially notable since they all occur during the course of Deathly Hallows.
Let's break this down further, shall we?
Despite introducing us to the term, Draco appears to scale back his usage of the slur as he ages.
Before partaking in this experiment, I was under the vague impression that, in the wizarding world, "mudblood" is seen as a childish insult. I can now see why: in times of peace (i.e. before Voldemort's resurrection), Draco is the only person in Harry's day-to-day life saying it and he himself peters off in the usage of "mudblood" as things get more serious. To Draco, it appears, "mudblood" IS a childish insult, and we'll see further proof of this at a later date.
part 4: the results/ HOW
Let us now look at how the term is used:
Unsurprisingly, the person "mudblood" is hurled most often at is Hermione. As a main character, she is the most visible muggleborn in the narrative and, if that wasn't enough, she is more often than not the only muggleborn present, even when it doesn't make much sense (Hermione is the only known muggleborn member of the order of the phoenix, an organization whose supposed aim is the fight for muggleborn rights.)
There are no known instances of the word "mudblood" being used to refer to any other muggleborn student during Harry's time at Hogwarts. Lily Evans is the only other school-aged character who gets the dubious honor of being a "mudblood".
Let's break this down further and look at who people are referring to when they say "mudblood":
*= Walburga's portrait never directly addresses Hermione, she only alludes to the presence of various filth (muggleborns, blood traitors, werewolves..) in her home. That said, Hermione is the only muggleborn we ever see in Grimmauld Place so it must stand to reason that Walburga is referring to her, just like she's indirectly referring ro Remus Lupin when she mentions werewolves.
**= Both Hermione and Lily use the term mudblood to refer to themselves in an attempt to reclaim the slur, they both do it twice.
***= Our only "other" is mr Ted Tonks, who Bellatrix only mentions in order to disavow when Voldemort talks about the birth of Teddy Lupin.
Interestingly, the only people who ever refer to Lily Evans as "mudblood" to her face are Severus Snape (one instance recounted three separate times) and Lily Evans herself. Voldemort uses the insult when talking about her with Harry long after her death.
Of further note, our only written "mudblood" comes by courtesy of a ministry pamphlet Harry finds in Diagon Alley, heavily implied to have been written by one ms Dolores Umbridge.
part 5: a brief interlude/ Draco's language
Draco refers to Hermione as âGrangerâ 13 times and, while their interactions often consist of him talking about her blood status, he uses "mudblood" instead of her name only 4 times. Furthemore, there are 4 additional times where he uses both mudblood and Granger (as in "that mudblood Granger").
The very first time Draco mentions Hermione in the books occurs during this exchange with Lucius:
I find this interesting because, even in private, his first instinct is to use her given name. It's only after he is scolded by Lucius* that we get our first "mudblood", in a scene where he is once again feeling threatened by her.
*= Guess who never utters the word "mudblood"? Lucius. Even Narcissa does once (in DH, when she recognises Hermione at the manor)
part 6: conclusion
I am not a linguistics expert, I cannot tell wether JKR uses the slur she made up in a way that mimics real world slurs. What I can do with the data I compiled is try to track various characters' attitudes towards muggleborns in the books by looking at what they call them.
People whose views remain unchanged (Voldemort, Kreacher, Walburga) remain consistent with their usage of "mudblood"; Draco, who grows up as the books progress, scales back. Snape only ever uses the word once, in the past, and the incident is retold multiple times to signify its importance.
As the situation in the wizarding world worsens, more people feel emboldened to use an otherwise taboo term, as seen by how most one-off utterances of "mudblood" take place in book7, during wartime.
Finally, I would like to note that we only ever hear two muggleborns' (Lily and Hermione) opinions on "mudblood" as a slur, the rest of the time it's mostly purebloods (and the occasional half-blood) telling us how to feel about the insult; I find that very interesting.
There. Now all this useless information is out of my brain and into the aether, where other nerds can ponder on its significance while this nerd here sleeps the sleep of the truly righteous.
xoxo
Yes. The Weasleys had too many kids. An analysis. (Part 2 of 2)
So, where were we? Right. The Weasleys have so many kids that it fucks with their family dynamic and with the mental health of everyone involved. Last time, we looked at Molly and Arthur during the war. We ended in 1981, which means that all kids are born, now. Molly is still nursing. (Itâs common to nurse kids up to two or three years, while slowly weaning them, so I assume that this is what Molly does.) Sheâs finally done with becoming pregnant every other year, however. And itâs about time, because her workload is bigger, than any single person can handle. And while it will decrease over time, it will stay enormous for the next couple of years.
1982 â Bill (who will be 12 at the end of the year) starts Hogwarts. Itâs his first lick of freedom. There is no babysitting-duty at Hogwarts. All he has to do is stay out of trouble and earn good grades. Other than that, he is free to do what he wants. He will be the only Weasley-sibling in Hogwarts for two years. Because of this, his parents probably have enough money in reserve to buy him a full Hogwarts-kit without resorting to second-hand-stuff too much. (He might get second-hand books, but his robes and wand are probably new.)
At home, life is still hard for Molly. She has one less kid to take care of, but the kids who are still in her care are a handful. She still needs to teach Charlie. Percy got 6 over the summer and is a little nerd, so she is likely teaching him, too. Fred and George are still chaos incarnate. (And they are just getting started, really.)
Billâs duties (chores around the home and watching his younger brothers) get passed down to Charlie. Percy might try his hand on this, too, because he is still in direct competition with the twins and Mum gives him attention when he helps her.
The war is over and the Weasleys start to feel the effects of this. As Death Eaters are captured and sentenced, the Wizarding World starts to feel safe, again. The stress eases off (but Molly is probably still grieving.)Â
Arthurâs work schedule slowly goes back to more normal levels, allowing him to spend more time at home. However, he missed out on a big chunk of his childrenâs childhood. Itâs also hard to return to his role as a parent, because at this point, the roles of the family are pretty much established: Molly is in charge and does most of the work. Some of the easier chores are passed down to her kids (first Bill, now Charlie, later Percy). This includes watching over his younger brothers while Molly takes care of her toddlers. Itâs kind of hard for him to integrate himself into this dynamic. (Just imagine him doing the laundry or the dishes â itâs very likely that he has a different way for doing this, which could easily disrupt Mollyâs workflow or simply just annoy her.)Â
I think he will mostly stick to the stuff he did when Bill and Charlie were little. So heâs taking his kids out for trips on the weekends. But this is difficult, too, because itâs not Bill and Charlie anymore, but Charlie, Percy, Fred and George. Their dynamic is entirely different, and itâs hard to keep an eye on all of them, while also satisfying their needs equally. (Especially because Percy, Fred and George start to clash.) As a result, the trips are probably not as frequent as they once were.
Itâs also possible that Arthur picks up his Muggle-hobby at this point. (Picking up this hobby causes him to spend at least some evenings in his shed, tinkering with Muggle-stuff instead of helping his wife. I imagine him to fade into the background a little bit, while he leaves the household and child-rearing to his wife.)
1984 â Charlie starts Hogwarts.
There are now two Weasley-Siblings at Hogwarts, but things are still pretty chill for them. Itâs still just Bill and Charlie, after all. Bill is probably considered trustworthy enough by his teachers to receive a time-turner, so he can take all electives Hogwarts has to offer. (I do wonder how much Mollyâs expectations are playing into this. She clearly expects her children to do well at Hogwarts, both in terms of grades and behavior. At this point, he is either a massive nerd like Hermione, trying to perform well to fulfill his motherâs expectations, or both. He is also setting a standard for his siblings here, whether this is on his own accord or because of pressure he receives from Molly.)
At home, Percy (now 8) takes over Charlieâs duties. He tries to control Fred and George. Itâs likely that he fails miserably. They are just too close age-wise for this to work.Â
Fred and George are 6 now and start to play rough. Last year, Fred turned Ronâs teddy bear into a giant spider (which probably caused Ron to develop arachnophobia). Next year, they will try to talk Ron into making an Unbreakable Vow with them. So keeping an eye on them is getting harder, not easier.
At this point in time, Scabbers exceeds the life span of his species. Rats can get up to two or three years old. (And Rowling knows this. This information is included in book 3, when Ron takes Scabbers to the pet store to have the witch there check on him.) This is Scabbers third year with the Weasleys, so his time is up. No one seems to notice, though. I donât blame Percy (or the other kids) for this, but Molly and Arthur should notice that they donât have to replace a rat or have a talk about how Scabbers is happier in the great rat heaven. They donât and I wonder why. My suggestions are: a) They are either not paying any attention to Percy and his pet (which would suck) or b) Scabbers is turning into Peter and uses a wand (his own or Mollyâs) to confund them as needed (which would suck even more).
1987 â Percy starts Hogwarts.
At the end of the 1986/87 school year, Bill (who is a prefect now) takes his OWL in all 12 courses Hogwarts has to offer. Itâs possible he returns his time turner after this or keeps it until his graduation to deal with his NEWT-workload. He now starts his sixth year. Charlie is in his fourth year and is already on the Quidditch team. Molly is very, very proud of both of them.
Percy is a wee first year and doesnât have to watch out for any younger siblings for once. He can focus on learning instead. He is probably the first boy in the family to end up with hand-me-down robes, as he has a similar build as Bill and Bill has probably outgrown his first set.
Scabbers is six, now. So he has lived twice as long as a normal rat would. Still, no one has caught up to the fact that he is awfully old for a rat. Itâs very likely that he accompanies Percy to Hogwarts. (It should be noted that Hogwarts only allows cats, owls and toads as pets, so Percy probably got a permission to bring a rat instead. However, no one at the school notices Scabberâs age either.)
Life at home is still chaotic. Fred and George are 10, Ron is 8 and Ginny is 7. Molly is probably teaching all of them. Her workload is slowly going down to a more manageable level, but keeping the twins in check is still a challenge.
She probably doesnât expect Fred and George to do chores and watch over their siblings. (At least not in the same way she expected from her older kids.) Mostly, because she canât trust them to do it. (Remember the Unbreakable Vow? Yeah, that.) Additionally, Ron simply has no authority over them, so thatâs not an option either.
1989 â Fred and George start Hogwarts.
In his seventh year, Bill was made Head Boy. By now, he took his NEWTs and left school. He probably returns home for a little while, before he takes the first chance he gets to fuck off to Egypt and play with cursed tombs. (We should probably talk about English wizards, Egyptian treasures and colonialism here, but thatâs a completely different can of worms.)
Charlie took his OWL and is now in his sixth year. Heâs still on the Quidditch team and should be Quidditch Captain by now. Heâs also a prefect. So between them, they got all the big achievements Hogwarts has to offer: Prefect (both of them), Head Boy (Bill) and Quidditch Captain (Charlie). Bill also got 12 OWL, which is an achievement on its own. Molly will measure her other children against this later.
Speaking of Molly: While her home life is going to relax a lot this year, her expectations are still around. She is still expecting her kids to do well in school. Considering that Fred and George are now at Hogwarts, the old demand âWatch over your younger siblings!â is back and in full swing. I canât see Charlie doing it â he has his head full of dragons and Quidditch and lived five blissful years in Hogwarts without the need to look after anyone all that much. Sure, Percy was at school, but he has already learned to look after himself. I donât think Charlie will start with this now. Not unless the twins interfere with his prefect- or Quidditch-duties or are completely out of line.
Percy is a different story, however. He is in his third year and still taking after Bill. Just like Bill he takes all electives, so it is likely that he also gets a time turner for this. At this point, Percy has ingrained the idea that he needs to perform exceptionally well at school and Bill set an incredible high bar to reach, but he is willing to do just that. He also spent a lot more time at home dealing with the twins. Mollyâs expectations for him to be a good boy and to look after his younger brothers will now put pressure on him again. He will probably try to control their chaotic behavior, but they are 11 now, and they will listen to him even less than before.
For Fred and George, this is heaven. They finally escaped the watchful eyes of their mother and have a whole new world to explore. So many secret passageways and even more victims to play pranks on. Percy is annoying, but they can play pranks on him, too. They will soon steal the Marauderâs Map from Filchâs office, which will open up even more possibilities. Itâs great. 10/10, no notes.
Life at home is finally manageable. Itâs just Molly, Ron and Ginny (and also Arthur and his Muggle-stuff). This is probably a nice time for Ron, because there are no older siblings around to steal his limelight. However, at this point he has the family dynamic internalized and his self-esteem is pretty low overall.
1991 â Ron starts Hogwarts.
By now, Charlie has left Hogwarts. It is unlikely that he actually finished his education, however. When Harry becomes a member of the Gryffindor team in Philosopherâs Stone, Fred says: âWe havenât won since Charlie left, but this yearâs team is going to be brilliant.â Had Charlie finished his education, he would have left in summer 1991. The quote is from autumn 1991. In this case, the quote would make no sense, because there were no matches for Gryffindor to lose between Charlie leaving and Harry becoming Gryffindorâs new seeker. So he must have left before then, probably sometime in his sixth or seventh year, after his seventeenth birthday.
Itâs important to note that we donât read about any fights over this. I canât imagine Molly being happy with this, but he must have had her permission. (Otherwise we would know about it. Molly canât shut up about the failures of the twins, she would not shut up about Charlieâs failures either.)
Percy is in his fifth year and a prefect. By now he is the career-driven rules lawyer we meet in canon. He will end this school year by taking all 12 OWL â just like Bill. (When Ron is made prefect in OotP, Molly makes sure to tell everyone that he is now a prefect, just like his older brothers, and she seems very comfortable doing so. I assume, Percy heard his fair share of this, when he was made prefect.)
The twins are in their third year and members of Gryffindorâs Quidditch team. By now, they have earned themselves a reputation as pranksters.
Ron is the sixth Weasley-kid to enter Hogwarts. While his older siblings might have gotten some second-hand stuff, everything he owns was basically handed down to him: Billâs old robes, Charlieâs old wand and Percyâs old pet rat. To be clear: none of those things make much sense to hand down (or at least not to Ron).
Billâs old robes should have gone to Percy after Bill left Hogwarts. They should be of a similar height, while Ron (as an eleven-year-old) should be somewhat smaller. Instead of handling it that way, Percy got new robes as a reward and Billâs robes were handed down to Ron. This is clear favoritism on Mollyâs part. Itâs no surprise that Ron (who already feels overlooked by his parents) feels upset about it.
Giving him Charlieâs old wand makes even less sense. We know, that the wand chooses its wizard. Charlieâs wand did not choose Ron, so it would not perform as well for him. In addition, in book 1 the wand is described as follows: âHe rummaged around in his trunk and pulled out a very battered-looking wand. It was chipped in places and something white was glinting at the end.â
That thing is basically falling apart. That was either a lot of wear and tear during Charlieâs time at Hogwarts (considering the fact that we have not heard anything about this with other wands, this is unlikely) or the wand was already a hand-me-down when Charlie got it. In either case, giving Ron a wand that has its core more or less poking out, doesnât sound very safe. I wonder why Arthur and Molly decided to do this. Did they expect Ron to have a great learning experience with a damaged wand? Did they want Ron to use the wand until it eventually did break, saving them another year or two before they had to buy a new one? (And yes, they would indeed need to buy him a new one in his third year, but they had no way of knowing that. Unless there are prophecies for that kind of shit. And even then. The fuck?)
Money is tight, of course. But is it really that tight? They could afford to get Percy an owl, after all. And buying a wand for their son is an expense they've had 11 years to plan. I understand getting second-hand robes and cauldrons, as they see a lot of wear and tear. But this should not apply to a wand in the same way. This is just really, really odd.
And then there is the elephant â and with elephant I mean rat â in the room: Scabbers. Firstly, that rat should be dead for at least seven years by now. No one seems to notice. No one cares. What the fuck.
Secondly, why is Percy giving his pet to Ron? There just isnât a great explanation for this. Scabbers has been his pet for ten years. TEN. Percy should be attached to his pet like glue. After all, he has Scabbers since he can remember. Why is he willing to part with his rat? The only reasons I can think of:
1) He does it because Molly asks him to. She is clearly playing favorites, here. Not only does he get new robes when he becomes prefect, but he also receives his very own owl as a gift. Itâs possible that this owl comes with strings attached, and Percy is required to give Scabbers to Ron to get the owl. Which would be a pretty fucked up situation for every child involved and shouldâve been handled differently.
2) Percy wants to get rid of Scabbers. He doesnât know about Scabbersâ Peter-shaped secret, of course (otherwise he wouldâve reported this). But it is possible that he feels, on a subconscious level, that something about Scabbers is off. Not in a dangerous way (again, he wouldâve reported this), just in an unpleasant way. (This would still be odd. Especially when we consider that no one noticed Scabbers age.)
3) Scabbers has decided that itâs time to jump ship. Percy just turned fifteen this year. He is old enough to grow suspicious of his seemingly immortal rat. Itâs possible that he cozied up to Ron to manipulate both boys into making the switch. Or he turned into Peter and confunded some Weasleys. Who knows. Heâs still a Death Eater and mass murderer on the run, after all.
1992 â Ginny starts Hogwarts.
The flock has left the nest. Mollyâs work is mostly over. Itâs just her and Arthur who stay at the burrow. She still takes care of the household, but the responsibility for her kids rest on other peopleâs shoulders, now. There is nothing left to do, except knitting, sending care packages, worrying about her kids careers and hexing the occasional howler. Molly could get a job now or pick up a hobby or two. I mean, she does read Gilderoy Lockhartâs shitty books. She is a fan of his, after all. But she doesnât seem to enter any community over this (no fan club, no reading circle, no nothing. Itâs just her). And there are no other hobbies outside of that.Â
Apropos community: We donât really see her having a community. She is a pretty important side character, but the books never mention that she has friends or other contacts outside her family. It seems like she is focusing on her kids and only on her kids.
Which would explain her meddling. Because Molly meddles a lot, when it comes to her kids and their futures. She keeps putting pressure on Percy to look after his younger siblings â this will expand to Harry after she gets to know him. Percy (still a good boy) does as she wishes. Itâs not healthy, neither for him nor for his relationship with his siblings (who are mostly annoyed by him), but Molly either doesnât notice or doesnât care. In the future, she will be very cross with Hermione after reading Rita Skeeters articles about her. She will also be upset about the twins' career choice and Bill's choice of girlfriendâŚ
And yeah, thatâs basically it. At this point, the family dynamic is firmly established and ingrained in her childrenâs heads. Percy is already set up to explode in the near future. Being Mollyâs Golden Child is neither good nor healthy, especially considering all the pressure that comes along with it. His relationship with his siblings isnât all that great, either.
Fun fact: We donât know if anyone ever told him about Scabbersâ Peter-shaped secret. If it did happen, it was probably pretty traumatic. That shit-show was his pet for ten fucking years and he handed it down to his younger brother. Thatâs nightmare fuel, even if Peter never hurt any of them.
The twins have firmly established themselves as troublemakers. At least some of their âjokesâ really arenât funny and border on cruel, neglectful and/or harmful. (Remember the Unbreakable Vow? Yeah, still not funny. In 1993, they also tried to lock Percy in a pyramid. Yes, I donât think they wanted to hurt him, not really, but that thing was still a cursed tomb. Things could have gone wrong, and at that point they were old enough to know better. In their last year they tested their joke-sweets on younger students who were neither adequately informed nor old enough to consent for something like this. Yes, they tested the sweets on themselves first, but something could still have gone wrong because of allergies and all that stuff. And after they left Hogwarts and started their joke shop, they do sell love potions to students, complete with options to smuggle that shit into school. Additionally, instead of going bad/losing their potency, those love potions get stronger with age. This alone is a horror story waiting to happen.)
Ron is affected, too. His self-esteem is pretty low when he starts Hogwarts and it will stay that way throughout the series. This will inform a lot of his decisions (especially the bad ones) in the future.Â
We donât know much about how all of this affected Bill, Charlie and Ginny. Bill and Charlie just arenât as involved in the narrative, and Ginny stays kind of⌠bland and love interest-ish⌠throughout the story.
So⌠yeah?
Am I saying that the Weasleys did not love their kids? No, of course not. Especially Molly shows her love regularly. (Her love is more like a water hose than a watering can, however. Very intense and focussed on a single spot at a time, instead of reaching all her kids equally.)
What I am saying is that the Weasleys, as a family, are pretty dysfunctional. Many factors are playing into this â Mollyâs and Arthurâs dynamic as a couple and as parents, the number of their kids, the war, etc. Itâs impacting all of them negatively. Molly is stressed out, Arthur is out of touch and some of their kids lose their trust (either in their parents, in their siblings or in themselves.) It also makes their love feel conditional. The twins feel this whenever Molly is comparing them with their older (more well-behaved) brothers. Percy feels this when he comes home with that promotion and is demoted from Golden Child to family-traitor within a heartbeat. Ron has internalized it and desperately seeks attention and affection elsewhere.
They still love each other, but itâs a difficult position to be in for most of them.
And the worst thing: I donât think Rowling notices any of this. She did not intend the family to be as dysfunctional as it is. She keeps portraying the Weasleys as this great, loving family who took Harry in when he needed it the most. And of course they did â but thatâs not all there is to it. There are so many issues that go unresolved in the books. Molly never learns to back off. The responsibility for the conflict between Arthur and Percy is placed entirely on Percy, despite Arthur being at fault, too. The twins never really learn that a prank can go too far. Ron doesnât really solve his self-esteem-issues. Rowling does start to give him some character development regarding his self-esteem-issues multiple times, but he always seems to revert back over the course of the summer holidays.Â
The family really deserved more effort to go into the writing.
Note: This analysis is not meant to say that stay-at-home parents are bad or that Molly should have gotten a job while having seven little kids at home. What I am criticizing is the way we treat care work. Because it is work, and a lot of work. A stay-at-home parent is often on call 24/7. A stay-at-home parent never really gets to take a break, never can take a day off, and never just can leave their work for another day. But they do deserve breaks and days off, just like any person with a day job. And that is where their partners and the rest of their families come in.
And this is the other thing I wanted to criticize here: The way we glorify living as a nuclear family. Itâs said that you need a village to raise a kid and I do think this is true. Having more people involved in child-rearing (be it relatives, neighbors or professionals like teachers) is a boon. Families had access to this for millennia. Raising your kids with the help of your family and your village was normal, up until very recently. And itâs a shame that the Weasleys seemingly had no help like this. And yes, I do see the fault with Rowling, who wrote them that way. She basically took the concept of the nuclear families of the 1980s and 1990s and slapped it onto the family, without any world building at all.
(Please also note, that I consider stay-at-home parents to be different from tradwives. When I use the term âtradwifeâ, I am specifically referring to stay-at-home mothers who do not just take care of their household and their kids, but who also commit themselves to having as many kids as possible and who tend to take on other duties (like homeschooling) as well. The most common examples of this are probably families who belong to fundamentalist Christian churches or cults.)
Yes. The Weasleys had too many kids. An analysis. (Part 2 of 2)
So, where were we? Right. The Weasleys have so many kids that it fucks with their family dynamic and with the mental health of everyone involved. Last time, we looked at Molly and Arthur during the war. We ended in 1981, which means that all kids are born, now. Molly is still nursing. (Itâs common to nurse kids up to two or three years, while slowly weaning them, so I assume that this is what Molly does.) Sheâs finally done with becoming pregnant every other year, however. And itâs about time, because her workload is bigger, than any single person can handle. And while it will decrease over time, it will stay enormous for the next couple of years.
1982 â Bill (who will be 12 at the end of the year) starts Hogwarts. Itâs his first lick of freedom. There is no babysitting-duty at Hogwarts. All he has to do is stay out of trouble and earn good grades. Other than that, he is free to do what he wants. He will be the only Weasley-sibling in Hogwarts for two years. Because of this, his parents probably have enough money in reserve to buy him a full Hogwarts-kit without resorting to second-hand-stuff too much. (He might get second-hand books, but his robes and wand are probably new.)
At home, life is still hard for Molly. She has one less kid to take care of, but the kids who are still in her care are a handful. She still needs to teach Charlie. Percy got 6 over the summer and is a little nerd, so she is likely teaching him, too. Fred and George are still chaos incarnate. (And they are just getting started, really.)
Billâs duties (chores around the home and watching his younger brothers) get passed down to Charlie. Percy might try his hand on this, too, because he is still in direct competition with the twins and Mum gives him attention when he helps her.
The war is over and the Weasleys start to feel the effects of this. As Death Eaters are captured and sentenced, the Wizarding World starts to feel safe, again. The stress eases off (but Molly is probably still grieving.)Â
Arthurâs work schedule slowly goes back to more normal levels, allowing him to spend more time at home. However, he missed out on a big chunk of his childrenâs childhood. Itâs also hard to return to his role as a parent, because at this point, the roles of the family are pretty much established: Molly is in charge and does most of the work. Some of the easier chores are passed down to her kids (first Bill, now Charlie, later Percy). This includes watching over his younger brothers while Molly takes care of her toddlers. Itâs kind of hard for him to integrate himself into this dynamic. (Just imagine him doing the laundry or the dishes â itâs very likely that he has a different way for doing this, which could easily disrupt Mollyâs workflow or simply just annoy her.)Â
I think he will mostly stick to the stuff he did when Bill and Charlie were little. So heâs taking his kids out for trips on the weekends. But this is difficult, too, because itâs not Bill and Charlie anymore, but Charlie, Percy, Fred and George. Their dynamic is entirely different, and itâs hard to keep an eye on all of them, while also satisfying their needs equally. (Especially because Percy, Fred and George start to clash.) As a result, the trips are probably not as frequent as they once were.
Itâs also possible that Arthur picks up his Muggle-hobby at this point. (Picking up this hobby causes him to spend at least some evenings in his shed, tinkering with Muggle-stuff instead of helping his wife. I imagine him to fade into the background a little bit, while he leaves the household and child-rearing to his wife.)
1984 â Charlie starts Hogwarts.
There are now two Weasley-Siblings at Hogwarts, but things are still pretty chill for them. Itâs still just Bill and Charlie, after all. Bill is probably considered trustworthy enough by his teachers to receive a time-turner, so he can take all electives Hogwarts has to offer. (I do wonder how much Mollyâs expectations are playing into this. She clearly expects her children to do well at Hogwarts, both in terms of grades and behavior. At this point, he is either a massive nerd like Hermione, trying to perform well to fulfill his motherâs expectations, or both. He is also setting a standard for his siblings here, whether this is on his own accord or because of pressure he receives from Molly.)
At home, Percy (now 8) takes over Charlieâs duties. He tries to control Fred and George. Itâs likely that he fails miserably. They are just too close age-wise for this to work.Â
Fred and George are 6 now and start to play rough. Last year, Fred turned Ronâs teddy bear into a giant spider (which probably caused Ron to develop arachnophobia). Next year, they will try to talk Ron into making an Unbreakable Vow with them. So keeping an eye on them is getting harder, not easier.
At this point in time, Scabbers exceeds the life span of his species. Rats can get up to two or three years old. (And Rowling knows this. This information is included in book 3, when Ron takes Scabbers to the pet store to have the witch there check on him.) This is Scabbers third year with the Weasleys, so his time is up. No one seems to notice, though. I donât blame Percy (or the other kids) for this, but Molly and Arthur should notice that they donât have to replace a rat or have a talk about how Scabbers is happier in the great rat heaven. They donât and I wonder why. My suggestions are: a) They are either not paying any attention to Percy and his pet (which would suck) or b) Scabbers is turning into Peter and uses a wand (his own or Mollyâs) to confund them as needed (which would suck even more).
1987 â Percy starts Hogwarts.
At the end of the 1986/87 school year, Bill (who is a prefect now) takes his OWL in all 12 courses Hogwarts has to offer. Itâs possible he returns his time turner after this or keeps it until his graduation to deal with his NEWT-workload. He now starts his sixth year. Charlie is in his fourth year and is already on the Quidditch team. Molly is very, very proud of both of them.
Percy is a wee first year and doesnât have to watch out for any younger siblings for once. He can focus on learning instead. He is probably the first boy in the family to end up with hand-me-down robes, as he has a similar build as Bill and Bill has probably outgrown his first set.
Scabbers is six, now. So he has lived twice as long as a normal rat would. Still, no one has caught up to the fact that he is awfully old for a rat. Itâs very likely that he accompanies Percy to Hogwarts. (It should be noted that Hogwarts only allows cats, owls and toads as pets, so Percy probably got a permission to bring a rat instead. However, no one at the school notices Scabberâs age either.)
Life at home is still chaotic. Fred and George are 10, Ron is 8 and Ginny is 7. Molly is probably teaching all of them. Her workload is slowly going down to a more manageable level, but keeping the twins in check is still a challenge.
She probably doesnât expect Fred and George to do chores and watch over their siblings. (At least not in the same way she expected from her older kids.) Mostly, because she canât trust them to do it. (Remember the Unbreakable Vow? Yeah, that.) Additionally, Ron simply has no authority over them, so thatâs not an option either.
1989 â Fred and George start Hogwarts.
In his seventh year, Bill was made Head Boy. By now, he took his NEWTs and left school. He probably returns home for a little while, before he takes the first chance he gets to fuck off to Egypt and play with cursed tombs. (We should probably talk about English wizards, Egyptian treasures and colonialism here, but thatâs a completely different can of worms.)
Charlie took his OWL and is now in his sixth year. Heâs still on the Quidditch team and should be Quidditch Captain by now. Heâs also a prefect. So between them, they got all the big achievements Hogwarts has to offer: Prefect (both of them), Head Boy (Bill) and Quidditch Captain (Charlie). Bill also got 12 OWL, which is an achievement on its own. Molly will measure her other children against this later.
Speaking of Molly: While her home life is going to relax a lot this year, her expectations are still around. She is still expecting her kids to do well in school. Considering that Fred and George are now at Hogwarts, the old demand âWatch over your younger siblings!â is back and in full swing. I canât see Charlie doing it â he has his head full of dragons and Quidditch and lived five blissful years in Hogwarts without the need to look after anyone all that much. Sure, Percy was at school, but he has already learned to look after himself. I donât think Charlie will start with this now. Not unless the twins interfere with his prefect- or Quidditch-duties or are completely out of line.
Percy is a different story, however. He is in his third year and still taking after Bill. Just like Bill he takes all electives, so it is likely that he also gets a time turner for this. At this point, Percy has ingrained the idea that he needs to perform exceptionally well at school and Bill set an incredible high bar to reach, but he is willing to do just that. He also spent a lot more time at home dealing with the twins. Mollyâs expectations for him to be a good boy and to look after his younger brothers will now put pressure on him again. He will probably try to control their chaotic behavior, but they are 11 now, and they will listen to him even less than before.
For Fred and George, this is heaven. They finally escaped the watchful eyes of their mother and have a whole new world to explore. So many secret passageways and even more victims to play pranks on. Percy is annoying, but they can play pranks on him, too. They will soon steal the Marauderâs Map from Filchâs office, which will open up even more possibilities. Itâs great. 10/10, no notes.
Life at home is finally manageable. Itâs just Molly, Ron and Ginny (and also Arthur and his Muggle-stuff). This is probably a nice time for Ron, because there are no older siblings around to steal his limelight. However, at this point he has the family dynamic internalized and his self-esteem is pretty low overall.
1991 â Ron starts Hogwarts.
By now, Charlie has left Hogwarts. It is unlikely that he actually finished his education, however. When Harry becomes a member of the Gryffindor team in Philosopherâs Stone, Fred says: âWe havenât won since Charlie left, but this yearâs team is going to be brilliant.â Had Charlie finished his education, he would have left in summer 1991. The quote is from autumn 1991. In this case, the quote would make no sense, because there were no matches for Gryffindor to lose between Charlie leaving and Harry becoming Gryffindorâs new seeker. So he must have left before then, probably sometime in his sixth or seventh year, after his seventeenth birthday.
Itâs important to note that we donât read about any fights over this. I canât imagine Molly being happy with this, but he must have had her permission. (Otherwise we would know about it. Molly canât shut up about the failures of the twins, she would not shut up about Charlieâs failures either.)
Percy is in his fifth year and a prefect. By now he is the career-driven rules lawyer we meet in canon. He will end this school year by taking all 12 OWL â just like Bill. (When Ron is made prefect in OotP, Molly makes sure to tell everyone that he is now a prefect, just like his older brothers, and she seems very comfortable doing so. I assume, Percy heard his fair share of this, when he was made prefect.)
The twins are in their third year and members of Gryffindorâs Quidditch team. By now, they have earned themselves a reputation as pranksters.
Ron is the sixth Weasley-kid to enter Hogwarts. While his older siblings might have gotten some second-hand stuff, everything he owns was basically handed down to him: Billâs old robes, Charlieâs old wand and Percyâs old pet rat. To be clear: none of those things make much sense to hand down (or at least not to Ron).
Billâs old robes should have gone to Percy after Bill left Hogwarts. They should be of a similar height, while Ron (as an eleven-year-old) should be somewhat smaller. Instead of handling it that way, Percy got new robes as a reward and Billâs robes were handed down to Ron. This is clear favoritism on Mollyâs part. Itâs no surprise that Ron (who already feels overlooked by his parents) feels upset about it.
Giving him Charlieâs old wand makes even less sense. We know, that the wand chooses its wizard. Charlieâs wand did not choose Ron, so it would not perform as well for him. In addition, in book 1 the wand is described as follows: âHe rummaged around in his trunk and pulled out a very battered-looking wand. It was chipped in places and something white was glinting at the end.â
That thing is basically falling apart. That was either a lot of wear and tear during Charlieâs time at Hogwarts (considering the fact that we have not heard anything about this with other wands, this is unlikely) or the wand was already a hand-me-down when Charlie got it. In either case, giving Ron a wand that has its core more or less poking out, doesnât sound very safe. I wonder why Arthur and Molly decided to do this. Did they expect Ron to have a great learning experience with a damaged wand? Did they want Ron to use the wand until it eventually did break, saving them another year or two before they had to buy a new one? (And yes, they would indeed need to buy him a new one in his third year, but they had no way of knowing that. Unless there are prophecies for that kind of shit. And even then. The fuck?)
Money is tight, of course. But is it really that tight? They could afford to get Percy an owl, after all. And buying a wand for their son is an expense they've had 11 years to plan. I understand getting second-hand robes and cauldrons, as they see a lot of wear and tear. But this should not apply to a wand in the same way. This is just really, really odd.
And then there is the elephant â and with elephant I mean rat â in the room: Scabbers. Firstly, that rat should be dead for at least seven years by now. No one seems to notice. No one cares. What the fuck.
Secondly, why is Percy giving his pet to Ron? There just isnât a great explanation for this. Scabbers has been his pet for ten years. TEN. Percy should be attached to his pet like glue. After all, he has Scabbers since he can remember. Why is he willing to part with his rat? The only reasons I can think of:
1) He does it because Molly asks him to. She is clearly playing favorites, here. Not only does he get new robes when he becomes prefect, but he also receives his very own owl as a gift. Itâs possible that this owl comes with strings attached, and Percy is required to give Scabbers to Ron to get the owl. Which would be a pretty fucked up situation for every child involved and shouldâve been handled differently.
2) Percy wants to get rid of Scabbers. He doesnât know about Scabbersâ Peter-shaped secret, of course (otherwise he wouldâve reported this). But it is possible that he feels, on a subconscious level, that something about Scabbers is off. Not in a dangerous way (again, he wouldâve reported this), just in an unpleasant way. (This would still be odd. Especially when we consider that no one noticed Scabbers age.)
3) Scabbers has decided that itâs time to jump ship. Percy just turned fifteen this year. He is old enough to grow suspicious of his seemingly immortal rat. Itâs possible that he cozied up to Ron to manipulate both boys into making the switch. Or he turned into Peter and confunded some Weasleys. Who knows. Heâs still a Death Eater and mass murderer on the run, after all.
1992 â Ginny starts Hogwarts.
The flock has left the nest. Mollyâs work is mostly over. Itâs just her and Arthur who stay at the burrow. She still takes care of the household, but the responsibility for her kids rest on other peopleâs shoulders, now. There is nothing left to do, except knitting, sending care packages, worrying about her kids careers and hexing the occasional howler. Molly could get a job now or pick up a hobby or two. I mean, she does read Gilderoy Lockhartâs shitty books. She is a fan of his, after all. But she doesnât seem to enter any community over this (no fan club, no reading circle, no nothing. Itâs just her). And there are no other hobbies outside of that.Â
Apropos community: We donât really see her having a community. She is a pretty important side character, but the books never mention that she has friends or other contacts outside her family. It seems like she is focusing on her kids and only on her kids.
Which would explain her meddling. Because Molly meddles a lot, when it comes to her kids and their futures. She keeps putting pressure on Percy to look after his younger siblings â this will expand to Harry after she gets to know him. Percy (still a good boy) does as she wishes. Itâs not healthy, neither for him nor for his relationship with his siblings (who are mostly annoyed by him), but Molly either doesnât notice or doesnât care. In the future, she will be very cross with Hermione after reading Rita Skeeters articles about her. She will also be upset about the twins' career choice and Bill's choice of girlfriendâŚ
And yeah, thatâs basically it. At this point, the family dynamic is firmly established and ingrained in her childrenâs heads. Percy is already set up to explode in the near future. Being Mollyâs Golden Child is neither good nor healthy, especially considering all the pressure that comes along with it. His relationship with his siblings isnât all that great, either.
Fun fact: We donât know if anyone ever told him about Scabbersâ Peter-shaped secret. If it did happen, it was probably pretty traumatic. That shit-show was his pet for ten fucking years and he handed it down to his younger brother. Thatâs nightmare fuel, even if Peter never hurt any of them.
The twins have firmly established themselves as troublemakers. At least some of their âjokesâ really arenât funny and border on cruel, neglectful and/or harmful. (Remember the Unbreakable Vow? Yeah, still not funny. In 1993, they also tried to lock Percy in a pyramid. Yes, I donât think they wanted to hurt him, not really, but that thing was still a cursed tomb. Things could have gone wrong, and at that point they were old enough to know better. In their last year they tested their joke-sweets on younger students who were neither adequately informed nor old enough to consent for something like this. Yes, they tested the sweets on themselves first, but something could still have gone wrong because of allergies and all that stuff. And after they left Hogwarts and started their joke shop, they do sell love potions to students, complete with options to smuggle that shit into school. Additionally, instead of going bad/losing their potency, those love potions get stronger with age. This alone is a horror story waiting to happen.)
Ron is affected, too. His self-esteem is pretty low when he starts Hogwarts and it will stay that way throughout the series. This will inform a lot of his decisions (especially the bad ones) in the future.Â
We donât know much about how all of this affected Bill, Charlie and Ginny. Bill and Charlie just arenât as involved in the narrative, and Ginny stays kind of⌠bland and love interest-ish⌠throughout the story.
So⌠yeah?
Am I saying that the Weasleys did not love their kids? No, of course not. Especially Molly shows her love regularly. (Her love is more like a water hose than a watering can, however. Very intense and focussed on a single spot at a time, instead of reaching all her kids equally.)
What I am saying is that the Weasleys, as a family, are pretty dysfunctional. Many factors are playing into this â Mollyâs and Arthurâs dynamic as a couple and as parents, the number of their kids, the war, etc. Itâs impacting all of them negatively. Molly is stressed out, Arthur is out of touch and some of their kids lose their trust (either in their parents, in their siblings or in themselves.) It also makes their love feel conditional. The twins feel this whenever Molly is comparing them with their older (more well-behaved) brothers. Percy feels this when he comes home with that promotion and is demoted from Golden Child to family-traitor within a heartbeat. Ron has internalized it and desperately seeks attention and affection elsewhere.
They still love each other, but itâs a difficult position to be in for most of them.
And the worst thing: I donât think Rowling notices any of this. She did not intend the family to be as dysfunctional as it is. She keeps portraying the Weasleys as this great, loving family who took Harry in when he needed it the most. And of course they did â but thatâs not all there is to it. There are so many issues that go unresolved in the books. Molly never learns to back off. The responsibility for the conflict between Arthur and Percy is placed entirely on Percy, despite Arthur being at fault, too. The twins never really learn that a prank can go too far. Ron doesnât really solve his self-esteem-issues. Rowling does start to give him some character development regarding his self-esteem-issues multiple times, but he always seems to revert back over the course of the summer holidays.Â
The family really deserved more effort to go into the writing.
Note: This analysis is not meant to say that stay-at-home parents are bad or that Molly should have gotten a job while having seven little kids at home. What I am criticizing is the way we treat care work. Because it is work, and a lot of work. A stay-at-home parent is often on call 24/7. A stay-at-home parent never really gets to take a break, never can take a day off, and never just can leave their work for another day. But they do deserve breaks and days off, just like any person with a day job. And that is where their partners and the rest of their families come in.
And this is the other thing I wanted to criticize here: The way we glorify living as a nuclear family. Itâs said that you need a village to raise a kid and I do think this is true. Having more people involved in child-rearing (be it relatives, neighbors or professionals like teachers) is a boon. Families had access to this for millennia. Raising your kids with the help of your family and your village was normal, up until very recently. And itâs a shame that the Weasleys seemingly had no help like this. And yes, I do see the fault with Rowling, who wrote them that way. She basically took the concept of the nuclear families of the 1980s and 1990s and slapped it onto the family, without any world building at all.
(Please also note, that I consider stay-at-home parents to be different from tradwives. When I use the term âtradwifeâ, I am specifically referring to stay-at-home mothers who do not just take care of their household and their kids, but who also commit themselves to having as many kids as possible and who tend to take on other duties (like homeschooling) as well. The most common examples of this are probably families who belong to fundamentalist Christian churches or cults.)
Yes. The Weasleys had too many kids. An analysis. (Part 1 of 2)
Everyone who read Harry Potter read about the prejudices regarding the Weasleys: They all have red hair, are poor and have more kids than they can afford. Insert a sneering Malfoy here.
The books were adamant that that was not the case. The Weasleys are depicted as the best family in the books. (Just look at the others. The Dursleys were narrow-minded, bigoted and abusive. The Malfoys were bigoted terrorists. The Lovegoods were weird. Letâs not even start about Merope and Riddle.)
However, if you look closer, the prejudices have some truth to them: They had more kids than they could afford. However, money isnât the issue here, not really.
Yes, the Weasleys are clearly depicted as members of the working class. They donât have much money and fall back on second-hand stuff a lot of the time. Ron in particular is shown to be using hand-me-downs in book one.
However, they donât live in abject poverty. The family owns their own home on their own land. They have a garden to grow their own vegetables and they have chickens. This means that food scarcity shouldnât be a big issue for them, because they can produce a lot of it on their own. (Magic should make this even easier, because they can use it for the gardening stuff. And if we assume that you can duplicate food, this should keep everyone well-fed.)
The main issue when it comes to money isnât that they donât have anything. They have clearly enough money to stay comfortably over water. They just donât have enough money to buy all the fancy shit the wizarding world uses as status symbols. (Like racing brooms and dress robes.)
Could things be better, money-wise? Sure. But one can have a loving, comfortable childhood, even with second-hand clothes and working class food. So no. Itâs not about the money.
Itâs about time.Â
And it's also about how the parents divide that time (and the work that comes along with it.)
The Weasleys follow a family structure one would expect from a muggle family of their time (the second half of the 20th century): Arthur is the one who goes out to work and earns money, while his wife Molly is a stay-at-home-mother who takes care of their home and kids. Itâs also just their nuclear family that lives in the burrow. There are no other relatives (no grandparents and no aunts or uncles, either) living there.
I find this a little bit weird, tbh. The nuclear family (parents and kids) living alone, without any other relatives and with the father as the sole breadwinner, is a pretty new development. The practice only really established itself after the Statute of Secrecy went into effect. It developed first in the upper classes (who used this to flaunt their wealth) and in urban centers (where there was no space to live together with your extended family.) Before this, living with one's extended family was very common, especially in rural areas, where it was beneficial to stick together. The Weasleyâs donât really have a reason to live as a nuclear family. There is no need for wizards to follow the Muggle trend, and things were different before the statute. Living with other, adult family members would also be beneficial, especially for Molly. And the books do suggest that the extended family is quite large, so âThey donât live with other relatives, because they donât have anyâ doesnât fit their situation either.
This is a common theme for Rowling, by the way. She tends to ignore the extended families of her characters, whenever it is possible. The numbers of grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins that get mentioned in the book is incredibly low. (The only character who seems to have close connections to his extended family is Neville â and thatâs because the other members of his nuclear family are completely absent because of health reasons.)
Anyway. When we look back at the Weasleys, this leaves Molly basically as a tradwife. (Minus the religious baggage.) But let's start at the beginning.Â
(Note: I will focus on the books in this. I donât consider the games canon and will not use them as a source.) Arthur and Molly were born around 1950. We know that he went to Hogwarts from 1961 to 1968. They were close enough in age to start a relationship while still at Hogwarts, and they married shortly after graduating. For this to work, she must have been in his year or maybe the year below or above.
Bill was born in 1970 and was followed by six siblings, the last who was born in 1981. So from the age of ca. 20 to the age of ca. 33 Molly was either pregnant or nursing at least one baby at any given time. (There might have been a short break in that pattern between Charlie and Percy, but it only got worse after that.)
As I said before, Molly and Arthur seem to have a very traditional division of labor between them: He works at the ministry and earns money, she takes care of their home and kids. This means that Molly has drawn the short end of the stick.
While Arthur is working one job 9-5, Molly has to work three jobs and at least one of them is 24/7. Letâs pick them apart:
Her first job is to take care of the home. Molly cleans the house and does the laundry. It is also very likely that she is not only responsible for cooking, but for food production in general. This means that she takes care of the garden and chickens. This would be pretty exhausting, if not for her magic. She can likely cut down on time and effort by using magic for most of those tasks.
On top of this, she is also producing at least some of the clothing her family wears. We don't see her sewing, but she knits a lot. She is using magic for that, too.
Her second job is to raise their kids. Molly is their primary caregiver and does most of the parenting. This is a difficult job to begin with, but there are seven of them. This is where her workload starts to stretch her thin. It canât be easy to do the laundry, while Ginny needs to be fed, Bill and Charlie are arguing in the backyard, and the twins have just vanished. Magic is less helpful here, because a lot of the work requires her to interact with her kids. She canât really flick her wand to speed that up.
On top of that - and this is where things get even worse - there doesn't seem to be any kind of elementary school in Wizarding Great Britain. At the very least, the books do not mention any form of primary education and Hogwarts seems to be Ronâs first school. But Hogwarts still requires its students to be able to read, write and do math. Having some education about the Wizarding World couldnât hurt, either.
However, someone has to teach the kids. And this someone is probably Molly, because Arthur is at work, and they donât have the money for a private tutor. They cant sent their kids to an elementary school, because there is none. (And they obviously did not send them to a muggle school.)Â
So this is her third job. This is another job she canât really speed up with magic, because she canât hex the knowledge into her kidsâ brains. (Or at least I hope she canât, because everything else would be disturbing.)
This means Molly has to take care of their home, produce their food, take care of their kids and teach them elementary school-stuff. All while being pregnant and/or nursing for circa 13 years straight.
Her workload just isnât doable for a single person. It might have started off okay, when she only had Bill and Charlie, and it probably got better once most kids had left the house to study at Hogwarts. But the years in between must have been hell. And she did not really have any help to do it.
Arthur was off to work most days and seems to spend quite a lot of time on his hobby. Additionally, he just doesnât seem to be all that involved as a father and seems to take care mostly of the fun stuff.Â
His parenting style is much more relaxed than Mollyâs, too. Heâs probably the parent the kids go to when they want to do something their mother would say no to. This, of course, makes parenting even harder for her, because she doesnât just have to deal with the kids, but also with Arthurâs parenting decisions. There are no other adult family members around to help her, either. They also donât have the money to hire help. (No wonder Molly dreamed of having her own slave house elf. It would have allowed her to drastically reduce her workload. Itâs a really disgusting wish, but I understand where it comes from.)
This is where the family dynamics probably took their first severe hit: Itâs very likely that Mollyâs workload left her with more work than she was able to do consistently. Whether Arthur pulled his weight in that regard is questionable (and he was at work for most of the day anyway.) She also had no other adults to help her, so she probably offloaded her workload elsewhere: her kids.
Yes. I think it is very likely that the Weasleys parentified their kids, especially Bill, Charlie and Percy. We donât see it with Bill and Charlie, probably because they had already left the house when Harry meets the family. Still, itâs a little weird that both of them went to live so far away from home. Yes, sure, exploring tombs in Egypt and taming dragons in Romania is fun and exciting in and off itself â but being so far away from home that mom canât rope you into household chores and babysitting duty is probably a really nice bonus. It would also relax their familial relationships quite a bit, because moving away gives them control over when and how they want to engage. (And itâs probably easier to be the fun big brother to your younger siblings when you arenât required to watch and control them every day.)
We do see it with Percy, however. He looks after and take responsibility for his younger siblings a lot, especially at Hogwarts. You can see it in the way he looks after Ginny and how heâs constantly at odds with Fred and George because they refuse to follow any rules.
Fuck, he still does this after the big row with his father. Yes, the letter he sends to Ron is pretty obnoxious, but he still wrote it. He did not need to. At that point he had cut all contact, after all. He clearly cared for his younger brother and wanted to look out for him, even if he did it in the most annoying way possible. It would be interesting to know whether he also wrote to Ginny or the twins or not.
Also, did I mention that the Weasleys have too many kids?
They have too many kids.
Itâs a numbers game, really. The more kids you have, the more time you have to use for household chores (you need to clean more, wash more, cook more, etc.) You also have less time to spend time with each kid individually. This is especially true for quality time â so time that isnât spent on chores or education. Time that is spent playing and talking with each other, just to enjoy each other's company.
Molly is already working three jobs. She doesnât really have any opportunity to spend time with her kids equally. Sheâs too busy looking after the home and teaching the older ones, while watching the younger ones and making sure the twins donât burn the house down.Â
I just donât see her spending quality time with her kids regularly, because of this. Itâs just difficult to talk with Charlie about his favorite dragons or read something to Percy or to play with Ron, when there is always someone else who needs her more. Full diapers. Empty stomachs. Unyielding stains of unknown origin on Arthur's work robes. A sudden explosion on the second floor. And probably everything at the same time and all the time.
So yeah. Chances are that her attention and her affection can be pretty hard to come by at times. (To a certain degree, this also applies to Arthur, because he is away from home so much.)
Letâs look at the timeline.
It probably starts pretty harmless:
1970 - Bill is born, and heâs the only kid for two years. Yeah, itâs Mollyâs first child, and she is a really young mother, but she is a stay-at-home-mum, and itâs just one kid. Itâs mostly her and Bill who are at home, and her workload isnât all that big, because she can use magic for most stuff. The war has started, but it probably hasnât kicked into overdrive just yet, so this shouldnât affect her too much either.
1972 â Charlie is born. Mollyâs workload is expanding, but things should still be pretty manageable. Also, they donât have another kid for almost four years. This allows Molly to adjust to caring for two kids. She can also relax from both pregnancies and births. If it wasnât for the war, this might be her favorite years as a mother.
When Arthur is involved in parenting Bill and Charlie, itâs probably on the weekends. I can imagine him taking them out to do fun stuff, so their mother can get some rest. Itâs probably a great time for him, because he can bond with his boys. I canât see him do much more than that, though. Molly has a handle on things, and interfering could be seen as overstepping.
1976 â Percy is born. This is probably the moment, where the attention-distribution in the family gets a little bit wonky. Molly has three kids now, and itâs the middle of the war. Bill is almost six, which means that she has to start teaching him, while simultaneously nursing Percy and keeping Charlie entertained/away from trouble. This is probably still manageable. She can wait a little longer with teaching Bill, so she can teach him and Charlie together. She can also hand him (and maybe Charlie) over to Arthur, so he can teach him/them on weekends.
Additionally, Arthur is probably still taking Bill and Charlie out for some bonding-fun-time. However, the war is in full swing now, so leaving the house gets increasingly dangerous. Their trips will get shorter and stay closer to home. They will happen less frequently, too. He will also end up working more because of the war, doing overtime much more frequently. When he is home, he is going to be exhausted, as a result.
1978 â Fred and George are born. The attention-distribution in the family falls off a cliff.
This is when Molly's workload starts to become overwhelming. Charlie will be 6 at the end of the year, Bill will be 8. She has to start teaching them, if she hasnât already. Otherwise, Bill will not be ready when he starts Hogwarts.
And on top of everything, Molly has to take care of the twins. She has to do everything that needs to be done for a newborn â times two.
So her workload explodes. Molly is raising five kids, now. She needs to educate Bill and Charlie, nurse Fred and George, and has to make sure Percy doesnât fall to the wayside completely. She also has her household chores that arenât related to her kids. The war is still raging on. Arthur is probably tied up at work most of the time, and when he is home, heâs exhausted. And Molly will be pregnant again in a year. (Really, why do they have so many kids during a war? One or two, I would understand, but this is getting irresponsible.)
This is probably the time when Bill has to take over at least some chores, not just to learn how to do them, but to take some pressure off of his mother. This might not be parentification yet, but it will get worse over time. I assume he has to look after his younger brothers a lot.
On top of all that, it is increasingly hard to shield the kids from the war. At least Bill and Charlie are old enough to understand that things are really, really wrong and scary. And there is not much Molly can do about it.
1980 - Ron is born. The twins are already old enough to open cupboards. Molly is not having a great time. She probably hands over Percy to Bill and Charlie (âGo, play with your little brother!â), so she can take care of baby Ron while keeping an eye on the twin shaped chaos that is growing by the day. She will be pregnant again in a couple of months.
Bill (who will be 10 at the end of the year) and Charlie (8) still require teaching. Percy (4) isnât old enough just yet, but he will be, soon. (And, letâs face it: Itâs Percy. Chances are that he wants to learn, even now.)
The war is still in full swing. Arthur is still overworked and underpaid. Everyone is tired and scared. This also affects the kids. There is probably a lot of pressure on Bill as the oldest brother to watch over his younger siblings, to make sure all of them stay safe. They donât spend much time outside their home, because itâs just too dangerous to do so.
Around 1980/81 is also the time when Mollyâs brothers Fabian and Gideon die. (Gideon can be seen in the photograph that was taken of the Order before James and Lily went into hiding, so he was still alive back then. But we know that he dies soon after the photograph was taken.) Molly never talks about her brothers in canon, but this must have been horrible for her.
1981 â Ginny is born. They are seven kids now. Fabian and Gideon will be dead by the end of the year (if they arenât already.) Mollyâs workload is at its peak, while her ability to pay equal amounts of attention to her kids is at an all-time low. Sheâs grieving, the rest of her family is in danger, and Arthur is stuck at the ministry. This means that she will likely lean on Billâs support even more. As Charlie is 8 now (and will be 9 at the end of the year), Molly might consider him old enough to help, so he might see an increase in responsibility, too. At this point, we are in parentification-territory.
With each day, the twins grow more into the troublemakers we see in canon. This sucks away attention and affection from their siblings (simply because they need to be watched and disciplined).
I think the following years are very formative for the family dynamics between the kids. Itâs probably less pronounced for Bill and Charlie (who are stuck with chores and babysitting-duty and will leave for Hogwarts soon-ish) and Ginny (who gets more attention because she is the youngest child and only girl). Itâs worse for the others. Percy, Fred, George and Ron are basically in direct competition for their mother's attention. I think the dynamic develops as follows:
Fred and George are active and pretty extroverted. They explore a lot and start to play pranks on their family members. This is overall harmless, but Molly has to pay attention to them, to make sure that no one accidentally gets hurt. From this, the twins learn that they can get Mollyâs attention by causing trouble, so they will lean into it even more.
This sucks away attention from Percy and Ron. It causes Percy to veer hard into the opposite direction: He tries to gain Mollyâs attention by following all her rules and fulfilling her wishes. This earns him her affection and will turn him into her golden child in the long run. It will also put a strain on his relationship with the twins, because Molly compares them a lot, especially when angry. This will cause Percy to perform the âGood boyâ-role even harder (because he doesnât want to be treated like the twins), while they start to resent him on some level.
Ron on the other hand is still too young to affect the family dynamic on his own. He internalizes that his mother cares more about his siblings and that there is nothing he can do about it.
The only good news: At the end of the year, the war ends. This will bring a lot of relief. (Itâs short term relief for now, things will need some time to go back to normal.)
However, the end of the war also means, that Percy gets a pet. Either late in 1981 or early in 1982 he (or another member of the family) finds a rat that is missing a finger on its front paw. Percy keeps him and calls him Scabbers.
We all know who Scabbers is, of course. I just want to highlight how fucked up this situation is. Percy is 5, when he adopts him. Because he was a little kid, he probably took him everywhere without a second thought â into the bathroom, into his bed, you know, everywhere. There is probably no part of Percyâs body Scabbers hasnât seen. Percy probably told him everything, too, all his worries, all of his fears. Itâs just creepy.
And keep in mind, Scabbers â Peter â is not just a random wizard. He is a Death Eater and mass murderer. We donât know if he ever hurt Percy (there are fanfics that do explore that possibility). He probably didnât, but the idea alone is nightmare fuel.
To get this back on track: This could have impacted the sibling-relationship, too. It depends on whether the other kids were allowed to keep pets.
With that, we are done with the war and with Mollyâs time being pregnant. The family dynamic is already fucked up â and it will get worse, as the kids get older. However, this post is long enough, already. So weâll take a break here. Next time, we will look at how the dynamics shift, once the kids start to go to Hogwarts. See ya!
Draco is often described in fics as having been Neville's worst bully but is that actually backed by canon ? This intrepid reporter scoured the books for any and all interactions between the two; the results?
See for yourself:
section A: active bullying
Philosopher's Stone is The Book when it comes to any and all Malfoy-based mistreatments of Neville. In PS we have the following interactions:
1)
Draco is a maladjusted little gremlin who doesn't know how to show curiosity for Neville's remembrall in a healthy manner; I give this a 3/10 on the bully scale
2)
Draco straight up curses Neville (the curse itself is treated as funny, Evil Draco is the evil problem), 8/10
same scene, apparently Draco stopped for a chat amidst all the leg locking; middling attempt, 6/10
3)
Draco delivers a group insult at Harry's second match and includes a Neville section, he did not expect any backtalk; 7/10
4)
off-screen forbidden forest hijinks. Harry considers it a joke, does Draco? Does Neville? not enough info; 5/10
BONUS ROUND
Lastly, I'm going to add this conversation from ootp, :
Draco here is indulging in his favorite pastime, Harry-baiting, and Neville is just a bystander. Draco does not seem to know about Neville's parents and he wasn't the intended target but I give this 10/10 because of the psychic damage it causes.
These are actually all the interactions Neville and Draco have in canon: a whole bunch in book 1 and then nothing. This intrigued me so I went looking for:
section B: Draco talking about Neville (but not to him)
1)
This takes place in book 1, during the remembrall scene. Draco is putting on a performance for his fellow Slytherins but actually concentrates very little on Neville's incident, this is literally all he says about him
2)
This takes place in Half-blood Prince, during the compartment scene (wherein Harry is a nosey nancy). This is the only time Draco talks about Neville with no Gryffindors in sight. He is not performing for an audience, merely having a routine discussion with his friends; this gives us the clearest picture of his actual attitude towards Neville (in one word: dismissive). Neville is mentioned in passing and immediately forgotten.
section B (the other way): Neville talking about Draco
This is from book 5. Draco claimed to know an OWL examiner, Neville shares what he knows. Not even a direct mention.
Again, I expected more. Finally, I checked the text for any neutral interactions between the two that may have happened offscreen, as in: both Draco and Neville were in the same location, information was shared between the two (or, more likely, shared by one of them with a third party and then overheard by the other) and no one ended up maimed or otherwise negatively impacted. This brings us to:
section C: ordinary conversations
1)
Again from book 1. Neville finds out about Norbert and tries to help, no known reaction from Draco
2)
From book 3. Draco was getting ready for his yearly train visit to Harry on the way to Hogwarts and somehow ended up in the general vicinity of Neville.
section D: conclusion
While my first instinct was to assume that the instances of bullying from book 1 would repeat themselves during the following years, it appears that Draco and Neville barely interact with each other from ages 12 onward.
Crabbe and Goyle are actually shown to have a more consistently antagonistic relationship with Neville than Draco does: it's them who Neville ends up fighting in book 1 (during Harry's second quidditch match), it's them who laugh when Snape admonishes him in potions in book 3 (immediately post Buckbeak, Draco is present and does not react to Neville) and finally, it's Crabbe who straight up chokes him in book 5 (in the DA vs inquisitorial squad kerfuffle in Umbridge's office).
One can perhaps assume that Draco's bullying continues as the years go on but goes unnoticed by Harry (our POV in the books) but I don't see this happening for one reason and one reason only: this is not what we observe from Neville's interactions with his actual greatest bully: Snape.
The narrative often makes space for Snape's remarks towards Neville (and their effect on him) regardless of plot relevance and they only increase in frequency as the books progress, so much so that in book 3 he is presented as Neville's greatest fear (by way of boggart).
The bullying somewhat plateaus around book 4 (where we can start seeing a shift in how jkr portrays both of them) and Snape and Neville eventually stop interacting completely after book 5, yet we are still presented with a number of interactions between the two that easily dwarfs Draco and Neville's. If Draco was actually a constant negative presence in Neville's life I'd expect to see a similar pattern and yet there is none.
tldr: Neville and Draco have actually very little to do with each other.
As a little treat, here's the only time Lucius Malfoy talks to Neville
Dude didn't have to roast him so hard, but he did.
The Music Video
at least the confetti machine worksâŚ.
Yes. The Weasleys had too many kids. An analysis. (Part 1 of 2)
Everyone who read Harry Potter read about the prejudices regarding the Weasleys: They all have red hair, are poor and have more kids than they can afford. Insert a sneering Malfoy here.
The books were adamant that that was not the case. The Weasleys are depicted as the best family in the books. (Just look at the others. The Dursleys were narrow-minded, bigoted and abusive. The Malfoys were bigoted terrorists. The Lovegoods were weird. Letâs not even start about Merope and Riddle.)
However, if you look closer, the prejudices have some truth to them: They had more kids than they could afford. However, money isnât the issue here, not really.
Yes, the Weasleys are clearly depicted as members of the working class. They donât have much money and fall back on second-hand stuff a lot of the time. Ron in particular is shown to be using hand-me-downs in book one.
However, they donât live in abject poverty. The family owns their own home on their own land. They have a garden to grow their own vegetables and they have chickens. This means that food scarcity shouldnât be a big issue for them, because they can produce a lot of it on their own. (Magic should make this even easier, because they can use it for the gardening stuff. And if we assume that you can duplicate food, this should keep everyone well-fed.)
The main issue when it comes to money isnât that they donât have anything. They have clearly enough money to stay comfortably over water. They just donât have enough money to buy all the fancy shit the wizarding world uses as status symbols. (Like racing brooms and dress robes.)
Could things be better, money-wise? Sure. But one can have a loving, comfortable childhood, even with second-hand clothes and working class food. So no. Itâs not about the money.
Itâs about time.Â
And it's also about how the parents divide that time (and the work that comes along with it.)
The Weasleys follow a family structure one would expect from a muggle family of their time (the second half of the 20th century): Arthur is the one who goes out to work and earns money, while his wife Molly is a stay-at-home-mother who takes care of their home and kids. Itâs also just their nuclear family that lives in the burrow. There are no other relatives (no grandparents and no aunts or uncles, either) living there.
I find this a little bit weird, tbh. The nuclear family (parents and kids) living alone, without any other relatives and with the father as the sole breadwinner, is a pretty new development. The practice only really established itself after the Statute of Secrecy went into effect. It developed first in the upper classes (who used this to flaunt their wealth) and in urban centers (where there was no space to live together with your extended family.) Before this, living with one's extended family was very common, especially in rural areas, where it was beneficial to stick together. The Weasleyâs donât really have a reason to live as a nuclear family. There is no need for wizards to follow the Muggle trend, and things were different before the statute. Living with other, adult family members would also be beneficial, especially for Molly. And the books do suggest that the extended family is quite large, so âThey donât live with other relatives, because they donât have anyâ doesnât fit their situation either.
This is a common theme for Rowling, by the way. She tends to ignore the extended families of her characters, whenever it is possible. The numbers of grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins that get mentioned in the book is incredibly low. (The only character who seems to have close connections to his extended family is Neville â and thatâs because the other members of his nuclear family are completely absent because of health reasons.)
Anyway. When we look back at the Weasleys, this leaves Molly basically as a tradwife. (Minus the religious baggage.) But let's start at the beginning.Â
(Note: I will focus on the books in this. I donât consider the games canon and will not use them as a source.) Arthur and Molly were born around 1950. We know that he went to Hogwarts from 1961 to 1968. They were close enough in age to start a relationship while still at Hogwarts, and they married shortly after graduating. For this to work, she must have been in his year or maybe the year below or above.
Bill was born in 1970 and was followed by six siblings, the last who was born in 1981. So from the age of ca. 20 to the age of ca. 33 Molly was either pregnant or nursing at least one baby at any given time. (There might have been a short break in that pattern between Charlie and Percy, but it only got worse after that.)
As I said before, Molly and Arthur seem to have a very traditional division of labor between them: He works at the ministry and earns money, she takes care of their home and kids. This means that Molly has drawn the short end of the stick.
While Arthur is working one job 9-5, Molly has to work three jobs and at least one of them is 24/7. Letâs pick them apart:
Her first job is to take care of the home. Molly cleans the house and does the laundry. It is also very likely that she is not only responsible for cooking, but for food production in general. This means that she takes care of the garden and chickens. This would be pretty exhausting, if not for her magic. She can likely cut down on time and effort by using magic for most of those tasks.
On top of this, she is also producing at least some of the clothing her family wears. We don't see her sewing, but she knits a lot. She is using magic for that, too.
Her second job is to raise their kids. Molly is their primary caregiver and does most of the parenting. This is a difficult job to begin with, but there are seven of them. This is where her workload starts to stretch her thin. It canât be easy to do the laundry, while Ginny needs to be fed, Bill and Charlie are arguing in the backyard, and the twins have just vanished. Magic is less helpful here, because a lot of the work requires her to interact with her kids. She canât really flick her wand to speed that up.
On top of that - and this is where things get even worse - there doesn't seem to be any kind of elementary school in Wizarding Great Britain. At the very least, the books do not mention any form of primary education and Hogwarts seems to be Ronâs first school. But Hogwarts still requires its students to be able to read, write and do math. Having some education about the Wizarding World couldnât hurt, either.
However, someone has to teach the kids. And this someone is probably Molly, because Arthur is at work, and they donât have the money for a private tutor. They cant sent their kids to an elementary school, because there is none. (And they obviously did not send them to a muggle school.)Â
So this is her third job. This is another job she canât really speed up with magic, because she canât hex the knowledge into her kidsâ brains. (Or at least I hope she canât, because everything else would be disturbing.)
This means Molly has to take care of their home, produce their food, take care of their kids and teach them elementary school-stuff. All while being pregnant and/or nursing for circa 13 years straight.
Her workload just isnât doable for a single person. It might have started off okay, when she only had Bill and Charlie, and it probably got better once most kids had left the house to study at Hogwarts. But the years in between must have been hell. And she did not really have any help to do it.
Arthur was off to work most days and seems to spend quite a lot of time on his hobby. Additionally, he just doesnât seem to be all that involved as a father and seems to take care mostly of the fun stuff.Â
His parenting style is much more relaxed than Mollyâs, too. Heâs probably the parent the kids go to when they want to do something their mother would say no to. This, of course, makes parenting even harder for her, because she doesnât just have to deal with the kids, but also with Arthurâs parenting decisions. There are no other adult family members around to help her, either. They also donât have the money to hire help. (No wonder Molly dreamed of having her own slave house elf. It would have allowed her to drastically reduce her workload. Itâs a really disgusting wish, but I understand where it comes from.)
This is where the family dynamics probably took their first severe hit: Itâs very likely that Mollyâs workload left her with more work than she was able to do consistently. Whether Arthur pulled his weight in that regard is questionable (and he was at work for most of the day anyway.) She also had no other adults to help her, so she probably offloaded her workload elsewhere: her kids.
Yes. I think it is very likely that the Weasleys parentified their kids, especially Bill, Charlie and Percy. We donât see it with Bill and Charlie, probably because they had already left the house when Harry meets the family. Still, itâs a little weird that both of them went to live so far away from home. Yes, sure, exploring tombs in Egypt and taming dragons in Romania is fun and exciting in and off itself â but being so far away from home that mom canât rope you into household chores and babysitting duty is probably a really nice bonus. It would also relax their familial relationships quite a bit, because moving away gives them control over when and how they want to engage. (And itâs probably easier to be the fun big brother to your younger siblings when you arenât required to watch and control them every day.)
We do see it with Percy, however. He looks after and take responsibility for his younger siblings a lot, especially at Hogwarts. You can see it in the way he looks after Ginny and how heâs constantly at odds with Fred and George because they refuse to follow any rules.
Fuck, he still does this after the big row with his father. Yes, the letter he sends to Ron is pretty obnoxious, but he still wrote it. He did not need to. At that point he had cut all contact, after all. He clearly cared for his younger brother and wanted to look out for him, even if he did it in the most annoying way possible. It would be interesting to know whether he also wrote to Ginny or the twins or not.
Also, did I mention that the Weasleys have too many kids?
They have too many kids.
Itâs a numbers game, really. The more kids you have, the more time you have to use for household chores (you need to clean more, wash more, cook more, etc.) You also have less time to spend time with each kid individually. This is especially true for quality time â so time that isnât spent on chores or education. Time that is spent playing and talking with each other, just to enjoy each other's company.
Molly is already working three jobs. She doesnât really have any opportunity to spend time with her kids equally. Sheâs too busy looking after the home and teaching the older ones, while watching the younger ones and making sure the twins donât burn the house down.Â
I just donât see her spending quality time with her kids regularly, because of this. Itâs just difficult to talk with Charlie about his favorite dragons or read something to Percy or to play with Ron, when there is always someone else who needs her more. Full diapers. Empty stomachs. Unyielding stains of unknown origin on Arthur's work robes. A sudden explosion on the second floor. And probably everything at the same time and all the time.
So yeah. Chances are that her attention and her affection can be pretty hard to come by at times. (To a certain degree, this also applies to Arthur, because he is away from home so much.)
Letâs look at the timeline.
It probably starts pretty harmless:
1970 - Bill is born, and heâs the only kid for two years. Yeah, itâs Mollyâs first child, and she is a really young mother, but she is a stay-at-home-mum, and itâs just one kid. Itâs mostly her and Bill who are at home, and her workload isnât all that big, because she can use magic for most stuff. The war has started, but it probably hasnât kicked into overdrive just yet, so this shouldnât affect her too much either.
1972 â Charlie is born. Mollyâs workload is expanding, but things should still be pretty manageable. Also, they donât have another kid for almost four years. This allows Molly to adjust to caring for two kids. She can also relax from both pregnancies and births. If it wasnât for the war, this might be her favorite years as a mother.
When Arthur is involved in parenting Bill and Charlie, itâs probably on the weekends. I can imagine him taking them out to do fun stuff, so their mother can get some rest. Itâs probably a great time for him, because he can bond with his boys. I canât see him do much more than that, though. Molly has a handle on things, and interfering could be seen as overstepping.
1976 â Percy is born. This is probably the moment, where the attention-distribution in the family gets a little bit wonky. Molly has three kids now, and itâs the middle of the war. Bill is almost six, which means that she has to start teaching him, while simultaneously nursing Percy and keeping Charlie entertained/away from trouble. This is probably still manageable. She can wait a little longer with teaching Bill, so she can teach him and Charlie together. She can also hand him (and maybe Charlie) over to Arthur, so he can teach him/them on weekends.
Additionally, Arthur is probably still taking Bill and Charlie out for some bonding-fun-time. However, the war is in full swing now, so leaving the house gets increasingly dangerous. Their trips will get shorter and stay closer to home. They will happen less frequently, too. He will also end up working more because of the war, doing overtime much more frequently. When he is home, he is going to be exhausted, as a result.
1978 â Fred and George are born. The attention-distribution in the family falls off a cliff.
This is when Molly's workload starts to become overwhelming. Charlie will be 6 at the end of the year, Bill will be 8. She has to start teaching them, if she hasnât already. Otherwise, Bill will not be ready when he starts Hogwarts.
And on top of everything, Molly has to take care of the twins. She has to do everything that needs to be done for a newborn â times two.
So her workload explodes. Molly is raising five kids, now. She needs to educate Bill and Charlie, nurse Fred and George, and has to make sure Percy doesnât fall to the wayside completely. She also has her household chores that arenât related to her kids. The war is still raging on. Arthur is probably tied up at work most of the time, and when he is home, heâs exhausted. And Molly will be pregnant again in a year. (Really, why do they have so many kids during a war? One or two, I would understand, but this is getting irresponsible.)
This is probably the time when Bill has to take over at least some chores, not just to learn how to do them, but to take some pressure off of his mother. This might not be parentification yet, but it will get worse over time. I assume he has to look after his younger brothers a lot.
On top of all that, it is increasingly hard to shield the kids from the war. At least Bill and Charlie are old enough to understand that things are really, really wrong and scary. And there is not much Molly can do about it.
1980 - Ron is born. The twins are already old enough to open cupboards. Molly is not having a great time. She probably hands over Percy to Bill and Charlie (âGo, play with your little brother!â), so she can take care of baby Ron while keeping an eye on the twin shaped chaos that is growing by the day. She will be pregnant again in a couple of months.
Bill (who will be 10 at the end of the year) and Charlie (8) still require teaching. Percy (4) isnât old enough just yet, but he will be, soon. (And, letâs face it: Itâs Percy. Chances are that he wants to learn, even now.)
The war is still in full swing. Arthur is still overworked and underpaid. Everyone is tired and scared. This also affects the kids. There is probably a lot of pressure on Bill as the oldest brother to watch over his younger siblings, to make sure all of them stay safe. They donât spend much time outside their home, because itâs just too dangerous to do so.
Around 1980/81 is also the time when Mollyâs brothers Fabian and Gideon die. (Gideon can be seen in the photograph that was taken of the Order before James and Lily went into hiding, so he was still alive back then. But we know that he dies soon after the photograph was taken.) Molly never talks about her brothers in canon, but this must have been horrible for her.
1981 â Ginny is born. They are seven kids now. Fabian and Gideon will be dead by the end of the year (if they arenât already.) Mollyâs workload is at its peak, while her ability to pay equal amounts of attention to her kids is at an all-time low. Sheâs grieving, the rest of her family is in danger, and Arthur is stuck at the ministry. This means that she will likely lean on Billâs support even more. As Charlie is 8 now (and will be 9 at the end of the year), Molly might consider him old enough to help, so he might see an increase in responsibility, too. At this point, we are in parentification-territory.
With each day, the twins grow more into the troublemakers we see in canon. This sucks away attention and affection from their siblings (simply because they need to be watched and disciplined).
I think the following years are very formative for the family dynamics between the kids. Itâs probably less pronounced for Bill and Charlie (who are stuck with chores and babysitting-duty and will leave for Hogwarts soon-ish) and Ginny (who gets more attention because she is the youngest child and only girl). Itâs worse for the others. Percy, Fred, George and Ron are basically in direct competition for their mother's attention. I think the dynamic develops as follows:
Fred and George are active and pretty extroverted. They explore a lot and start to play pranks on their family members. This is overall harmless, but Molly has to pay attention to them, to make sure that no one accidentally gets hurt. From this, the twins learn that they can get Mollyâs attention by causing trouble, so they will lean into it even more.
This sucks away attention from Percy and Ron. It causes Percy to veer hard into the opposite direction: He tries to gain Mollyâs attention by following all her rules and fulfilling her wishes. This earns him her affection and will turn him into her golden child in the long run. It will also put a strain on his relationship with the twins, because Molly compares them a lot, especially when angry. This will cause Percy to perform the âGood boyâ-role even harder (because he doesnât want to be treated like the twins), while they start to resent him on some level.
Ron on the other hand is still too young to affect the family dynamic on his own. He internalizes that his mother cares more about his siblings and that there is nothing he can do about it.
The only good news: At the end of the year, the war ends. This will bring a lot of relief. (Itâs short term relief for now, things will need some time to go back to normal.)
However, the end of the war also means, that Percy gets a pet. Either late in 1981 or early in 1982 he (or another member of the family) finds a rat that is missing a finger on its front paw. Percy keeps him and calls him Scabbers.
We all know who Scabbers is, of course. I just want to highlight how fucked up this situation is. Percy is 5, when he adopts him. Because he was a little kid, he probably took him everywhere without a second thought â into the bathroom, into his bed, you know, everywhere. There is probably no part of Percyâs body Scabbers hasnât seen. Percy probably told him everything, too, all his worries, all of his fears. Itâs just creepy.
And keep in mind, Scabbers â Peter â is not just a random wizard. He is a Death Eater and mass murderer. We donât know if he ever hurt Percy (there are fanfics that do explore that possibility). He probably didnât, but the idea alone is nightmare fuel.
To get this back on track: This could have impacted the sibling-relationship, too. It depends on whether the other kids were allowed to keep pets.
With that, we are done with the war and with Mollyâs time being pregnant. The family dynamic is already fucked up â and it will get worse, as the kids get older. However, this post is long enough, already. So weâll take a break here. Next time, we will look at how the dynamics shift, once the kids start to go to Hogwarts. See ya!
This is a great analysis!
I would like to add that the first two or three books really are children of their time. They belong to a very specific kind of children's literature that was still popular when they got published. In this type of literature, violence and abuse get exaggerated. The goal is to make them absurd and hilarious instead of serious and disturbing.
So the violence the Dursleys commit against Harry is basically supposed to cross the line twice. The Dursleys cross the line the first time, because they abuse him. But then their methods are so exaggerated, that the whole thing loops back around and crosses the line again. The scene with the frying pan and the cat flap aren't supposed to be taken literally. They are on the books to take off the edge of abuse.
I think a big factor in this, that the early books were written in the 1990s, when corporal punishment of children by their parents/guardians was legal and normalized. No, FUCK THAT, it's still legal and normalized in England to this day. And it is also legal in way to many other countries, too. (My country started to prohibit it in the 1980s, but they had to rework the law to include all forms of corporal punishment. And then they had to rework it again, to drive home the point that No, it's not legal for you to hit your kids. No, not even if you only hit them a little bit. What part of No do you not understand?!)
So, a lot of readers grew up in an environment, where they themselves were hit by their caregivers and where this form of punishment was considered to be normal. Including Rowling herself. So she needed a way to show that the abuse Harry suffered, exceeded the abuse that was considered normal and socially acceptable, back then. That's where stuff like the frying pan and the barred window come in. It shows that the abuse exceeds the societal limits, without scaring the target audience and without being "too close to home".
I think that's the mistake some fanfic writers do, when they try to portray the abuse Harry suffered as realistic. If one wanted to portray this in a more realistic manner, the abuse would need to be toned down, not dialed up even more. (Because the abuse is already horrible in an absurd kind of way. Making it even worse doesn't make it more realistic. Often, it makes it even more absurd instead.)
That said, I'm personally not very happy about how the books handled abuse. The absurd punishments the Dursleys dish out in the first books may fit the genre, but they really clash with the more serious, less whimsical tone of the later books.
What irks me more, is the parentification (if you can call it that, in Harry's case, because they didn't treat him like an additional parent, but more like a servant), so him being forced to cook and clean for them.* Because that shit isn't dealt up to eleven, but portrayed pretty realistic instead. I have the feeling that this is caused by Rowling not really understanding non-physical forms of abuse. Because, let's face it, the Weasleys were parentifying their kids, too, but it isn't portrayed as bad in their case.
(* I do agree that this is a rather recent development, especially the cooking. You just can't expect a young child to cook meals, without them burning the food, burning themselves and/or burning the house down. The daughter of a colleague of mine almost managed to do the latter with a couple of ready-made hotdogs and a microwave. And she was eight at the time.)
how bad do you think Harry's abuse was? like, okay we all know he was neglected his entire childhood. Do you think he really didn't know his name until he went to school? That he was forced to help around the house the moment he could walk? He prob also didn't know his birthday at some point :(( I love him so much, i want to throttle the dursleys
I mean, just from his behavior I feel like it was pretty bad. I talked about it a bit before and he's very aware he is being mistreated. Harry literally makes a joke about Vernon beating him:
âYou donât seem to need many qualifications to liaise with Muggles. . . . All they want is an O.W.L. in Muggle Studies. . . . âMuch more important is your enthusiasm, patience, and a good sense of fun!â â âYouâd need more than a good sense of fun to liaise with my uncle,â said Harry darkly. âGood sense of when to duck, more like . . .â
(OOTP, 657)
As for the abuse itself:
Dudley and his friends beat him often. As mentioned repeatedly.
He slept in a cupboard under the stairs until the Dursleys thought someone else might notice. Only when they got the Hogwarts letter that mentioned the cupboard did they move Harry to Dudley's second bedroom. (The title of the room itself and where Harry was sleeping show how much of an afterthought he was).
The house had no pictures of him, no belongings, no sign Harry lived there, he only got Dudley's cast-offs.
So, yeah, it's definitely neglectful to an insane degree.
As for the more fanon portrayals of the Dursleys' abuse.
They did starve him as a form of punishment:
Uncle Vernon waited until Piers was safely out of the house before starting on Harry. He was so angry he could hardly speak. He managed to say, âGo â cupboard â stay â no meals,â before he collapsed into a chair, and Aunt Petunia had to run and get him a large brandy.
(PS, 23)
And Harry didn't get much food at the Dursleys in general:
This was their encounter with the fact that a full stomach meant good spirits; an empty one, bickering and gloom. Harry was least surprised by this, because he had suffered periods of near starvation at the Dursleys.
(DH, 250)
But he did get to eat with them at the table when he wasn't being punished, seen with Aunt Marge, and when the Dursleys didn't have guests:
Harry, who could see a huge Dudley tantrum coming on, began wolfing down his bacon as fast as possible in case Dudley turned the table over.
(PS, 19)
That being said, Harry seems to be punished at the Dursleys pretty often. (Although, Harry considers sitting with them at the table punishment enough)
So the fanon portrayal of getting locked in the cupboard/his room with no food for who knows how long (or just, not enough food, like in CoS when he shared a canned meal with Hedwig) is actually canon.
He gets physically abused by Dudley, but also by Vernon and Petunia. We saw Petunia try to hit him with a frying pan.
Aunt Petunia knew he hadnât really done magic, but he still had to duck as she aimed a heavy blow at his head with the soapy frying pan. Then she gave him work to do, with the promise he wouldnât eat again until heâd finished.
(CoS, 17)
The above qoute mentions how he was forced to do chores with the threat of no food until he's done with his chores. So, yes, he was forced to work at the Dursleys. Another quote indicating he had plenty of practice cleaning over at the Dursleys:
âFilchâll have me there all night,â said Ron heavily. âNo magic! There must be about a hundred cups in that room. Iâm no good at Muggle cleaning.â âIâd swap anytime,â said Harry hollowly. âIâve had loads of practice with the Dursleys. Answering Lockhartâs fan mail . . . heâll be a nightmare. . . .â
(CoS, 114)
That being said, we see Petunia cooking more often than Harry, and she's also mentioned cleaning on occasion:
At last, at long last, the final evening of Margeâs stay arrived. Aunt Petunia cooked a fancy dinner and Uncle Vernon uncorked several bottles of wine.
(PoA, 26)
âRight â Iâm off into town to pick up the dinner jackets for Dudley and me. And you,â he snarled at Harry. âYou stay out of your auntâs way while sheâs cleaning.â
(CoS, 14)
I think he wasn't constantly worked like a house elf the way the fandom sometimes portrays it. He was made to clean often enough but he didn't cook that often. The breakfast in PS is likely more of an exception than the norm as whenever any fancy dinner, like with Marge or the Masons, it's always Petunia cooking it, not Harry. So, I don't think Harry cooked or cleaned for them since he could walk, I mean Petunia is a perfectionist about how her house looks, so she wouldn't let a small child who'd do a subpar work do it.
But he was definitely put to work as either punishment or when the Dursleys wanted him occupied. And considering he mentions "plenty of practice" when he's 12 and he spent the last two years at Hogwarts, he likely started doing chores earlier than that, but old enough to use a mop properly. So, I'd guess he started helping to clean the house around the time he was 6 or 7 years old, and started cooking on occasion only very recently before the books start in all likelihood.
The really shitty thing about all his chores is that Dudley isn't doing anything and it's just Harry. This difference is one Harry was always aware of and considers unfair, because it is incredibly unfair. The fact he is forced to do work and gets punished when the other child in the house doesn't adds to the sense of worthlessness the Dursleys already make Harry feel.
Uncle Vernon in general is pretty violent towards Harry, shown in the first quote in this post and in others:
Harry ran down the stairs two at a time, coming to an abrupt halt several steps from the bottom, as long experience had taught him to remain out of armâs reach of his uncle whenever possible.
(HBP, 45)
I wanted to add the imprisonment in CoS, because the treatment is truly subhuman:
The following morning, he paid a man to fit bars on Harryâs window. He himself fitted a cat-flap in the bedroom door, so that small amounts of food could be pushed inside three times a day. They let Harry out to use the bathroom morning and evening. Otherwise, he was locked in his room around the clock.
(CoS, 28)
They treat him like an actual prisoner. They let him out to the bathroom twice a day! Like WTF! This is so not okay I don't have words.
As for not calling him by his name...
âWe could phone Marge,â Uncle Vernon suggested. âDonât be silly, Vernon, she hates the boy.â The Dursleys often spoke about Harry like this, as though he wasnât there â or rather, as though he was something very nasty that couldnât understand them, like a slug.
(PS, 19)
They usually refer to Harry simply as "boy" or "the boy", they also use "you" when talking to him or "him" about him, but not his name, except one time in PS when Vernon is faking being nice:
âEr â yes, Harry â about this cupboard. Your aunt and I have been thinkingâŚyouâre really getting a bit big for itâŚwe think it might be nice if you moved into Dudleyâs second bedroom.
(PS, 30)
Considering how Harry mentions they often don't speak to him, but at him or about him, definitely suggests they don't use his name often. Vernon seems very odd about using Harry's name, and we see it isn't something common, but it does happen. I think Harry did always know his name though, I'm sure he asked, and regardless of how awful the Dursleys are, Petunia likely told him his name in the same breath she talked about how his father was a drunkard that got both him and Lily killed.
We also know they don't do anything for Harry's birthday, and Harry doesn't think they remember it:
The lighted dial of Dudleyâs watch, which was dangling over the edge of the sofa on his fat wrist, told Harry heâd be eleven in ten minutesâ time. He lay and watched his birthday tick nearer, wondering if the Dursleys would remember at all, wondering where the letter writer was now.
(PS, 35)
So, it's very plausible the Dursleys never told Harry when his birthday is and that he had to discover it himself somehow.
TL;DR
Harry's abuse at the Dursleys was awful. It included physical abuse from all three Durslesy and periods of starvation.
He was put to chores like cleaning the house, but it wasn't a constant thing where he worked like a house elf. It actually seems Petunia did most of the cooking.
He probably only started cleaning when he was 6 or 7 at the youngest. And cooking is likely a later development.
Harry was allowed to sit at the table and even watch TV on rare occasions but usually didn't get to choose what to watch. It means Harry should be somewhat aware of muggle pop culture at the time.
Harry, in general, wasn't really treated as human. Not having his name used, only talked at, not having his birthday celebrated, not getting pocket money or anything of his own. Not to mention being forced to sleep in the cupboard or on the floor (in the shack on the sea in PS) and getting his food through a cat flap on his bedroom door like an actual prisoner in CoS.
So, while fanon portrayals make the Dursleys worse than they actually are, they are plenty awful on their own. Believe me, if I could throttle them, I would.
Now I picture something like this.
Percy:
[image.png]
Charlie:
Youâre avoiding the question
Charlie:
That dog looks so done with your shit and Iâm living through him vicariously
Percy snorted.
-
okay so i might be having too much fun with this-
Lately, I have some plot bunnies gnawing at my brain cells. The newest: Percy never broke off contact with Charlie. It was very low-key. Every other week or so, Charlie would send a letter. No accusations, though. No demands. No questions either. Just pictures of his cute*, scaly babies.
And sometimes, Percy would send pictures back.
(* "Cute" by Charlie's standards. Percy would have used very different descriptions.)
Whale Shark Pride pt.3đłđłď¸âđ