'How fond she is of finding morals in things!' Alice thought to herself.
I have been watching with a great deal of interest the various responses -- and responses to the responses, and responses to the responses to the responses -- to J.K. Rowling's
rant in which she stated that she hopes her daughters grow up to not "give a gust of stinking
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Yup. The awful thing about prejudices is that we all know them, we've got them stored in our heads, and even if we don't actively think we believe them, they can creep into our perception when we're not paying attention. The sense I am getting from some people is that it's the author's duty to actively and explicitly describe a character in a positive, non-stereotyping light so as to counteract the negative picture we may otherwise allow to creep in of our own accord. That is, she's failing if she simply calls Slughorn very fat and then goes on to describe his colorful personality, because such a neutral statement leaves room for us readers to "fill in the blanks" with our assumptions that "fat" is meant negatively ( ... )
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Also, if she's ever used a prejudice, as with Harry's feelings about Dudley, that absolutely defines her views about that quality and somehow colors her descriptions of every other character in the series. Just like one or two casual remarks about "what women are like" is an "Aha, gotcha!" that clearly reveals her deep cesspools of female self-hatred and stereotyping. We know these things!
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