golfmom said:
What is up with all this Harry Potter stuff? I've never read the books or seen the movies. Is this normal? I thought these were children's books. Would they have an appeal to adults? :waitasec:
Post above Raven describes Janet as interested in the Harry Potter books and not only reading, but re-reading them.
On his blog he again refers to Harry Potter . . .
http://ravenstree.blogspot.com/
Location:North Carolina, United States
I have just enough Native American and Hispanic blood to claim myself as Lamanite. Malfoy in the
Harry Potter series would call me a Muggle or Mud-Blood. In any case, I am proud of my Native American grandfather and my Mexican grandfather. Both have overcome many obstacles to give their families the lifestyles we have now. It is what it is my friends!
and finally . . .
http://www.ravenstree.com/mylife2.htm
4/25/05: this is an image of Kaiden snoozing after a bottle. I tried capturing an image of his
Harry Potter like scar running above his right eye.
For some adults HP is an escape, but a normal one. My wife is one of those. For others it becomes a big fat allegory.
Knowing HP by osmosis as I do, let me try some theoretical answers to the questions you posed, because they're excellent.
In the school Hogwarts, attended by HP and his friends and enemies, the students are broken down into "Houses." Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff, Slytherin, and Gryffindor. Each student is sorted by a magical "sorting hat" upon arrival into their respective houses, the hat sorting by sussing out basic characteristics of each student and determining what house they would best fit in. For our purposes I only refer to the qualities of two houses, as they hold the characters Raven referred to; Slytherin and Gryffindor.
Slytherins are cunning, will use any means to achieve their ends -- the positive side of a kid who would get sorted into Slytherin might be ambition, striving. Gryffindors -- Harry, his best friends Ron and Hermione are in that one -- are courageous, bold, level-headed, friendly. Gryffindors are, obviously, the heroes of the books.
The character Malfoy Raven first refers to is Harry Potter's Slytherin nemesis. Hyper-aryan looking, with white blonde hair, Malfoy is, in part, symbolic of bigotry and classism. Wizards and witches who are the children of "humans" and another wizard are the "mud-bloods" Raven mentioned. Normals in the HP universe are called "muggles." The Malfoy family is very prejudiced against Harry's friend Hermione, because even though she's a gifted witch, one of her parents is not.
Harry has a distinctive zig-zag scar on his forehead from the terrible event that killed his parents; the ultimate evil wizard, Lord Voldemort, killed Harry's parents when he was an infant. Harry received his wound causing the scar then. It will still bleed whenever Voldemort is around in the books, or hurt.
(If you're an HP purist, forgive me any slightly off details here -- I'm actually consulting my wife as I go.)
PHEW! Now, with that out of the way -- it's obvious to me that Raven identifies with the character of Harry Potter. He must have read the books after Janet. Lots of couples do this. My wife is prosletysing me to read the books again even as I write -- I'm rather prejudiced toward literature written for people 20 and over, even though I know
everyone reads Harry, my basic conception of HP is that it's early teen lit. I'm nearly broken down, though, as I've thoroughly enjoyed the movies -- so nobody give me grief!
Raven's parents were divorced early, and he makes it sound like times were pretty rough on them. This sets up his identification with orphaned, put-upon Harry right there -- in the muggle world Harry lives with his muggle Aunt & Uncle, and they are borderline abusive towards him. Raven's myth of himself is seen in the Harry Potter references; a beat-down boy who is still a hero with special abilities. Since Raven is a raging narcissist, Kaiden automatically becomes an extension of the same -- Kaiden is not
Kaiden, a new little individual bringing something unique to the family; to a narcissist, that baby is another little them. That's why some narcissistic killers can murder one person brutally but seem to be gentle and doting toward another. Raven has developed this delusional story of his world where he is the hero and the center of things, I think, and Kaiden's HP-like scar -- which probably is barely visible and looks not a bit like Harry's, and why would a 6-month old have such a scar anyway? -- is emblematic of Raven seeing the child as an extension of him.
It
is normal for adults to like Harry Potter; the stories are almost unfailingly entertaining and inventive. What is abnormal is Raven's obvious sincere appropriation of the myth for his own life. However, if he is worse than just self-absorbed and did kill Janet, which we do not yet know he did, he still isn't insane -- he's pretty typical of the antisocial, narcissistic personalities who do commit such crimes. They rarely see themselves as anything but a hero pitted against a world where the odds are against them.
It's not about HP here -- it's about how Raven has adopted the archetypes for his own use because they match his fantasy of himself.
I hate to admit it, but I noticed the HP references immediately, and they were part of what troubled me. Raven painting himself as the striving, heroic, gifted little boy against the odds.
One gets the idea Janet didn't fit into that story.