[HPforGrownups] Re: a sandwich
Katie Spilman
kspilman at hotmail.com
Mon Nov 5 02:49:50 UTC 2007
No: HPFGUIDX 178834
Why is everyone so worried about house elves yet I don't anyone complaining about the gnome-abuse storyline that was prevalent throughout any time Harry visited the Weasleys.
To: HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com
From: sistermagpie at earthlink.net
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2007 01:51:40 +0000
Subject: [HPforGrownups] Re: a sandwich
> Pippin:
> Of course slavery is counter-cultural to the 20th/21st century West,
> which is why Hermione finds its existence in the WW so hard to
accept.
> The goblins' ideas about property ownership are also
> counter-cultural. But to see the goblin side of things is
comfortably
> anti-Imperialist, while to see the House Elves' side is not. JKR is
> demonstrating the biases the leftist outlook brings to the table,
> not because she's anti-leftist, IMO, but because it was leftists
like
> herself she was planning to reach.
Magpie:
Hermione is being a stupid lefty in her trying to force the House
Elves to be free, sure. That's obvious. But that doesn't change that
she does it in this case by creating slaves that conform to pro-
slavery arguments. So anybody who doesn't like Harry the slave owner
ending still has the same point they always did. (Oddly, she herself
said that Hermione was right and that House Elves was like slavery,
meaning in our world.)
Pippin:
> The Elves are different than us. They mostly don't like to work for
wages
> and they mostly don't mind being owned. The goblins too have
> different ideas about the uses of money and different concepts of
> ownership. But being pro-Goblin flatters our anti-Imperialist
> notions, and we want them to be right, while being pro-House Elf
> seems to put us on the same side as Simon Legree. But of
> course despite some superficial similarities, wizards are not
antebellum
> slave owners any more than Goblins are American Indians.
Magpie:
The Elves don't just "not mind" being owned or working for people,
they seriously want it. House Elves actually conform to the view of
slaves that slave owners had. They need to be slaves, and it's fine
that Harry owns one. Twenty-first century anti-Imperialist views or
anti-slavery views don't hold up in this universe. Not sure what she
needed to reach me to tell me there. (Though I doubt she really
expected anybody to side with the goblins.)
Pippin:>
> Since no nineteenth century slave owners are going to be reading
> the books, I think whether they would be happy to identify with
> the wizard slave owners is irrelevant. But it would be difficult for
> anyone with normal sympathies to identify with making House
> Elves punish themselves.
Magpie:
So I sympathize with the House Elves having to punish themselves
so...well, nobody's working to lift that enchantment so the solution
is just to be a good master that they want to serve so that they
don't do anything wrong and have to be punished. Meanwhile, since
Harry isn't an ante-bellum slave owner there's apparently nothing
potentially threatening to his character about owning one. Harry gets
a slave character who fawns over his superior master and talks funny
but it's totally okay he's not actually human.
Pippin:
That is never shown as a moral practice
> and it is intrinsic to House Elf slavery, along with the fact,
mentioned
> by Ron in CoS, that House Elves can usually only use their magic
with
> their owner's permission. We see what happens to magical creatures
> who can't use their magic, so that is a powerful incentive too.
Magpie:
A powerful incentive to what? For me or the characters to have a few
problems with House Elf slavery? There's nothing I or they can do
about it so might as well just be good owners and enjoy the good
service. It works perfectly well in canon, but I'm not getting any
great lessons out of it.
Pippin:
>
> Even if some idiot thought that House Elf style slavery would be a
> good idea in RL, duplicating its conditions is as far beyond our
capabilities
> as creating Eloi and Morlocks. But real people can be conditioned
to
> accept slavery to some extent.
Magpie:
So don't try this in your world because it won't work. Only in a
fantasy world do you get slaves like this. It's not going to bring
slavery back, but it's not saying much against it.
Pippin:
That is an inconvenient truth which in
> no way makes slavery more palatable, but does make it harder to get
> rid of. JKR was brave to recognize that in her books, IMO.
Magpie:
Brave to recognize what? That she hadn't really created a way for
House Elves to be realistically freed? She did seem to recognize that
but I wouldn't call it brave.
Pippin:>
> The point of Hermione's storyline, I think, is that well-meaning
solutions
> which are imposed without considering the fact that people do
survive
> under slavery, (and other horrifying conditions) and may not want
to
> be patronized or treated as helpless, are part of the problem.
Magpie:
Yes, that is the point of it, it seems. So in the end she just joins
the system.
> Magpie:
> This is also why I see no hint that JKR's really
> > showing us the temptation of slavery here, since there's no hint
at
> > all that owning slaves could be corruptive to one's character.
>
> Pippin:
> Much of wizard-kind has ceased to see the Elves' being forced to
> punish themselves, or not being allowed to use magic without their
> masters' permission as anything terrible. To that extent their
> moral sense has been corrupted.
Magpie:
If you slap that on it yourself. I don't see this shown in canon at
all. Maybe it also shows that wizards have been corrupted because the
house elves are doing the cooking and nobody ever worries that they
haven't learned to cook themselves. The fact that they can't use
their magic without their owners' (general) permission *isn't*
terrible. And most wizards don't have any dealings with them--who's
to say they don't care if they punish themselves? Ron doesn't seem to
like it and he's a regular wizard. There's nothing in canon that
*shows* this point in any way, that their moral sense has been
corrupted that way. The elves are punishing themselves, nobody's
doing it to them. And the story ends with Master Harry with his slave
and not worried about that stuff at all--and no, I see no indication
that that's supposed to be an ominous note.
-m
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