Sins of Hagrid -- Subversive bigotry
ssk7882
theennead at attbi.com
Wed Jan 23 06:16:26 UTC 2002
No: HPFGUIDX 33950
> --- In HPforGrownups at y..., "cindysphynx" <cindysphynx at h...> wrote:
> Hagrid gave Dudley (an innocent child) a pig's tail because
> he was angry at Vernon.
Jo replied:
> Dudley an innocent child? He's a horrid, mean, bullying brat.
Yes, but Hagrid had no real way of knowing that at the time, now,
did he? He may have inferred it from the overall unpleasantness
of the family, but that's every bit as bad as people judging
Hagrid himself on the basis of his giant parentage.
I just went and re-read the scene in question, and it seemed
quite clear to me. Hagrid was angry with Vernon, and he chose
to take it out on the man's eleven-year-old son.
Not nice. Not nice at all. I do think that he acted
impulsively, without any particular degree of malice
aforethought, but it was still a rotten thing to do, and it
doesn't win him any sympathy points from me. Furthermore,
I think that it revealed a rather disturbing lack of respect
and consideration for Muggles as a general class.
Which brings me to my own problem with Hagrid. My problem
with Hagrid isn't that he's a rotten teacher (although I
think that he is), nor that he recklessly endangers his
students' safety (although he does), nor that he tipples
(which he does, but I don't have a problem with that),
nor even that he lacks discretion (hey, nobody's perfect).
No, my problem with Hagrid is that his thoughtlessness
all too often leads him perilously close to bigotry.
I don't think that he's a bigot in any deep, philosophical
sense, no. Far to the contrary, he is one of the most
consistent and vocal antagonists to the entire "pure-blood"
aesthetic throughout the books.
But.
He's also a bigot himself, and a very particular type of
bigot: the thoughtless man whose fondness for sweeping
generalizations and snap judgments leads him to make
statements that are not only deeply prejudiced, but also
frequently Just Plain Not True.
"Not a single witch or wizard who went bad who wasn't in
Slytherin," for example. Or that bit about how you can't
trust foreigners. Or his comment about the Malfoys having
"bad blood" -- which really is _rich,_ you know, given the
big-boned skeletons hiding in Hagrid's own family closet.
Or, for that matter, his assurance to Harry that he'll surely
grow up to be a great wizard, because "with a mum an' dad
like yours, what else would yeh be?"
Hagrid is *not* a believer in the primacy of blood. He
really, really isn't. But when he isn't thinking too hard,
he just kind of...slips back into that mode of thinking, and
starts going on about "bad blood" and Harry's rights of magical
inheritance and so forth. Just as he is *not* a muggle-hater,
and yet, and yet, and yet...
"I'd like to see a great Muggle like you stop him."
"...it's your bad luck you grew up in a family o' the biggest
Muggles I ever laid eyes on."
"Look at what she had for a sister!"
And so forth.
I like to think that we're supposed to notice this unsavory
tendency of Hagrid's, that this is Rowling's way of showing
the subversive power of institutionalized bigotry. Hagrid's
a product of his culture, and his culture is not an
egalitarian one. He *does* believe in egalitarianism, very
strongly. But when he isn't watching himself, the ugly
underside of his own culture slips through the cracks, and
he betrays himself.
-- Elkins, who is kind of fond of Hagrid, but sometimes
wants to smack him upside the head
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