This is the shorter version of an essay I presented at the Popular Culture Association conference on Thursday April 9. If you would like the full essay (be warned, it's 20 pages), send me a message.
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“I sometimes think we Sort too soon” - Rehumanizing the Slytherins: How Fandom Gave Humanity Back to a Quarter of the Wizarding World )
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It's ludicrous and simplistic to claim this, and you know it. Slytherin House is seen as evil by Harry/the reader for very good reasons, the first of which is Draco Malfoy - a spoiled, bigoted, hateful little shit just like Dudley Dursley, who goes out of the way to conflate his own twisted values with those of his House even before he's sorted into it. Harry is quite justified in not wanting to be in Slytherin House, given that Draco claimed to typify the kind of child who was sorted into it.
Slytherin House's troubles began when Tom Riddle started there - IMO it was he who turned the place into a cesspit of vileness. Before that, the worst you could have said about Slytherin was that it attracted self-serving opportunists like Horace Slughorn, and the odd pureblood bigot who didn't as yet have a focus for his evil and who might still be told by his classmates to shut up or apologize if he said the M word. THAT's the real ( ... )
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And yet for all he's the saviour of the wizarding world, for all his sacrifices and good deeds, there's no mention of "redeeming" Slytherin, no attempt to turn the other cheek. He returns hostility and foul play with more of the same, and it's the only way he deals with Slytherin.
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