JKR is like my husband about her heroes - - they have to be simple and good, black and white, no gray at all, no flaws. We've had that argument dozens of times. I like my heroes as you say - - complex, flawed, *human*. Hufflepuffs and Gryffindors may be the ones who get the glory, but it *is* us Ravenclaws and Slytherins who do the dirty work and the thinking, and get no recognition. And I'd rather be that way.
Yeah - I think she's got hung up on very simple hero/villain archetypes, as concepts, and even though she's created these lovely, complex, human characters, she can't see Snape as a hero, because she knows he's flawed, and heroes can't be flawed. Someone needs to sit her down and point out all the flawed heroes in great literature...and then thwack her over the head. ;-)
Hehehe, yes! At first I was pissed at Jo's answer, but then I remembered that she's an idiot. .... Okay, fine, that's a bit harsh; I'm still grumpy about that book, I can't help it. But yeah, she's definitely got that simplistic view of things, and like you said, she can't even appreciate her own character in Snape nor (apparently) fathom why people love him. I just don't get her sometimes. *sighs*
J and I were discussing it again last night, and it occurred to me that in a way, Jo-the-author (as opposed to Jo-the-mom, at least I hope so!) is like a parent who never really sees the good in (one of) her kids. I've known people like that - they may love their kids, even know and understand them, their motivations and how they'll react, to some degree, but all they *focus* on is how the kid screws up. They forever find fault, rather than seeing the kid's good points. I think that's how she is with Snape - she made him; she knows he's bitter and petty and vindictive. She knows he loved Lily, and she knows why he did all the things he did, but instead of giving him credit for it all, she can only see him as a nasty person, and therefore unworthy of admiration, unworthy to be a hero. She grudgingly admits he's brave, but she's still focusing on his flaws, rather than the fact that he did the heroic thing, when really, he didn't *have* to.
*sigh*
*rescues Snape and Remus and Fred and Hedwig and puts them somewhere safe*
Yeah, it just boggles my mind that she can write this stuff - complex, detailed, fascinating world and characters - enthrall us all with it, and yet not really see what she's created, except in the most simplistic of forms.
As I just replied to ebonyserpent's comment above, I think Jo, as Snape's "mom," can only see his failings. Harry's her favorite, her golden boy, and although she admits he has his faults, he's THE HERO, and therefore all is forgiven him. Hell, she even cuts Dumbledore huge swathes of slack, when to my mind, he's a hell of a lot more culpable than poor Snape!
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*sigh*
*rescues Snape and Remus and Fred and Hedwig and puts them somewhere safe*
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As I just replied to ebonyserpent's comment above, I think Jo, as Snape's "mom," can only see his failings. Harry's her favorite, her golden boy, and although she admits he has his faults, he's THE HERO, and therefore all is forgiven him. Hell, she even cuts Dumbledore huge swathes of slack, when to my mind, he's a hell of a lot more culpable than poor Snape!
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