Weasley Poverty - In Perspective
va32h
va32h at yahoo.com
Wed Feb 2 14:02:21 UTC 2005
No: HPFGUIDX 123749
I wonder if this subject isn't being a bit over-thought.
Harry's being rich is a plot device. How else is an orphaned child
whose caretakers despise him going to pay for his unusual schooling?
Well, conveniently, he has inherited a bunch of wizard gold from his
parents.
Ron's poverty is another plot device. First, it sets up a surce of
conflict between him and Harry that runs throughout the book.
Second, it sets up a conflict between Draco and Ron (and by
association Harry).
Many times, the "poverty" of Ron's character is essential to the
story. Ron can't afford a new wand when his is broken, so he has to
use his faulty one, which then backfires when Lockhart is trying to
use a memory charm on Ron & Harry - thus saving the boys.
Ron't family can't buy him a new pet, so they keep the old rat
Scabbers, who sets the entire plot of PoA rolling.
Some elements of the books are there to be exactly that - an element
of the story, not a social commentary.
I don't understand why a book series that is based primarily on the
notion that there is an alternate world full of people with magical
powers is criticized for not having enough cold hard realism.
va32h
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