This is topic Rowling Says Dumbledore Is Gay in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Juxtapose (Member # 8837) on :
 
Newsweek article:

quote:
In front of a full house of hardcore Potter fans at Carnegie Hall in New York, Rowling, sitting on the stage on a red velvet and carved wood throne, read from her seventh and final book, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," then took questions. One fan asked whether Albus Dumbledore, the head of the famed Hogwarts School of Wizardry and Witchcraft, had ever loved anyone. Rowling smiled. "Dumbledore is gay, actually," replied Rowling as the audience errupted in surprise.
I suppose the issue is somewhat appropriate given how Deathly Hallows explores Dumbledore's early life for the first time, but I can't help but think, "so what?"

Edited to include link.

[ October 20, 2007, 12:20 AM: Message edited by: Juxtapose ]
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
Just like Gandalf.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Is this a joke? That's...possibly the most random thing I've ever heard.

I join in on the "so what?" And the way that article is worded sounds like it COULD be construed as offensive. As if to say, "No he hasn't loved anyone, he's gay." Like "he's gay" is an answer.

Anyway, where's your source for this? No offense but, this sounds like something from the Onion.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
I love JK Rowling. How much must she have been enjoying sitting on that one?
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by mr_porteiro_head:
Just like Gandalf.

Funny, despite the fact that Gandalf is obviously an old man, I've always thought of him as gender neutral, from his Olorin days. I didn't think Maiar had gender.
 
Posted by Juxtapose (Member # 8837) on :
 
I forgot to add the code for the link and have edited my first post to fix the error.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
I think porter's making a reference to Ian McKellen rather than to the literary character. I could be wrong, though.

(Why do I get the feeling this was done mainly to give the slash fic authors someone other than Draco to fixate on?)
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
I think it was a reference to Ian McKellan. (The Gandalf bit.)
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Ooh! Yeah that just clicked in my head and makes more sense.
 
Posted by Shanna (Member # 7900) on :
 
Of course she has to go and make the least sexiest character in the book gay.

I hear slashers everywhere cheering and crying all at once.
 
Posted by Tarrsk (Member # 332) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyrhawn:
Is this a joke? That's...possibly the most random thing I've ever heard.

I join in on the "so what?" And the way that article is worded sounds like it COULD be construed as offensive. As if to say, "No he hasn't loved anyone, he's gay." Like "he's gay" is an answer.

I can see how you'd get that vibe from just that sentence alone, but the article immediately follows it up with Rowling's description of Dumbledore's unrequited love for Grindelwald, so...
 
Posted by Juxtapose (Member # 8837) on :
 
He wrote that before I'd linked the article.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Tarrsk:
quote:
Originally posted by Lyrhawn:
Is this a joke? That's...possibly the most random thing I've ever heard.

I join in on the "so what?" And the way that article is worded sounds like it COULD be construed as offensive. As if to say, "No he hasn't loved anyone, he's gay." Like "he's gay" is an answer.

I can see how you'd get that vibe from just that sentence alone, but the article immediately follows it up with Rowling's description of Dumbledore's unrequited love for Grindelwald, so...
I always knew all that plotting to take over the world was just a smokescreen for some hanky panky.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Makes his killing of Grindelwald teh emo!!111
 
Posted by JonHecht (Member # 9712) on :
 
Seriously, he killed his love. How sad.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
He didn't kill him. And Grindelwald's final act was to try to keep Voldemort from going after Dumbledore. Aw.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
quote:
I didn't think Maiar had gender.
I don't know if they all had gender, but many of them did. One example is Melian, mother of Luthien.

Yes, I was referencing Ian McKellan. I don't recall anything from Tolkien even hinting that Gandalf was a sexual being at all.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Oh good point, I guess some of the Maiar did have gender. I need to reread my Silmarillion.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
As do I.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
I'm actually in the middle of Fellowship right now. I picked it up randomly and got about 10 pages in when I realized I haven't read it in like two or three years. I read the Silmarillion probably twice a year, but I think I'm going to reread all of it while I'm at it, though I don't know if I'm going to go back and read the Histories or not, but I think I'll run through the Sil, Children of Hurin (yay!), and the Unfinished Tales while I'm at it. Might as well get all that Fantasy yearning at one time before I dive into something new.
 
Posted by Samprimary (Member # 8561) on :
 
"Let me get this straight," said Snape. "You're asking me to commit a hate crime?"
 
Posted by Joldo (Member # 6991) on :
 
It explains his brilliance and creativity.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Psst. It's McKellen, guys. Honest! [Wink]
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
I always thought Ian McKellan would make an excellent Dumbledore, which has nothing to do with anything, but I wanted to throw that in there because I really thought he would be good. Okay.
 
Posted by Lalo (Member # 3772) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Fyfe:
He didn't kill him. And Grindelwald's final act was to try to keep Voldemort from going after Dumbledore. Aw.

I was thinking the exact same thing. That just became really powerful.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
Yeah, but it makes all those tender Harry/Dumbledore moments just a bit, I don't know, creepy.
 
Posted by Saephon (Member # 9623) on :
 
Call me crazy, and I really don't care about who is what sexual orientation, but to echo a sentiment voiced here months ago.....I'm kind of sick of her telling us all this stuff that didn't make it into the book.

Look, you had your chance. You wrote what you could. If you want to do the encyclopedia thing, okay. Maybe I'm something of a jerk, but to me the stuff you leave to your reader's imagination can be just as important as what you do write down [Razz]
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dan_raven:
Yeah, but it makes all those tender Harry/Dumbledore moments just a bit, I don't know, creepy.

Why?
 
Posted by BlackBlade (Member # 8376) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by kmbboots:
quote:
Originally posted by Dan_raven:
Yeah, but it makes all those tender Harry/Dumbledore moments just a bit, I don't know, creepy.

Why?
Well imagine Dumbledore actually being a head mistress and saying/doing all those things with Harry from all the books. Are you saying the thought would have NEVER entered your mind that Dumbledelores (sorry couldn't help it) might MIGHT enjoy Harry's company for reasons outside maternalism?

edit: Personally to me, Dumbledore being gay changes nothing for me. Even knowing he was gay, I don't think I'd pick up on any sort of advances towards Harry, Dumbledore has way more class than that. I too however wish Rowling would stop spontaneously blurting out details about here characters that she did not include in the books. I'd rather not reread the books through a different lense every few years because she keeps doing it. Write an encyclopedia, and be done with it.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
"I too however wish Rowling would stop spontaneously blurting out details about here characters that she did not include in the books."

Yeah, me too, but I seriously doubt she'll stop anytime soon. She has no idea, I'm sure, how annoying it can be.
 
Posted by littlemissattitude (Member # 4514) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by steven:
"I too however wish Rowling would stop spontaneously blurting out details about here characters that she did not include in the books."

Yeah, me too, but I seriously doubt she'll stop anytime soon. She has no idea, I'm sure, how annoying it can be.

Actually, as far as I can see they are her books, her characters, and her privilege to say or not say what she wants about them.

Kind of like how everyone got so upset when George Lucas "ruined" their Star Wars films when he reworked eps. 4, 5, and 6. No. They are his films, to do with what he wants. In my opinion.
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BlackBlade:
quote:
Originally posted by kmbboots:
quote:
Originally posted by Dan_raven:
Yeah, but it makes all those tender Harry/Dumbledore moments just a bit, I don't know, creepy.

Why?
Well imagine Dumbledore actually being a head mistress and saying/doing all those things with Harry from all the books. Are you saying the thought would have NEVER entered your mind that Dumbledelores (sorry couldn't help it) might MIGHT enjoy Harry's company for reasons outside maternalism?


Um...no. What did they do that was sexual? Love comes in many varieties, many of which are not about sex.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
"Actually, as far as I can see they are her books, her characters, and her privilege to say or not say what she wants about them."

It's mine and BlackBlade's privilege to find it largely a waste of our time, is it not? [Big Grin]
 
Posted by MandyM (Member # 8375) on :
 
I think it bothers me more that she said Neville ended up with Hannah Abbott rather than Luna. I thought Neville and Luna would have been great together. Grrr!
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
steven: I'm having a hard time understanding how Rowling speaking to fans at a book-signing about a particular character's sexuality is in any way a waste of your time. were you there? did she call you up aftewards and force you to listen to the news?

incidentals about a particular fictional world (such as who-married-who and what job someone had) are the author's prerogative to reveal. most good authors have huge, elaborate back-stories for their characters. why does it bother you so much? because she is choosing to release that information in an informal manner, rather than in another book?
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
I was disappointed about the Hannah Abbott thing too, but maybe Hannah Abbott is a very cool person, if we only knew. We just don't know anything about her. I never really was in favor of a Neville-Luna relationship; I can see him wanting to marry her, but I don't think she'd have him. Her marrying a weird-creatures-finder guy is much more better, I feel.
 
Posted by Belle (Member # 2314) on :
 
I agree totally that she should just hush. She should pour her energies into another series. Even if i'ts still related to the HP universe, at least do something new instead of just spilling information about a series that's already been written and talked to death.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
I agree with Fyfe about Neville and Luna. I don't like the idea of pairing them off just because they're the two odd-men-out. They both deserved someone who appreciates them for who they are.

I think it's cool that Dumbledore turns out to be gay. It makes a lot of sense now, though it never occurred to me before. It gives so much more depth and poignance to the Grindelwald subplot. How sad! I love Dumbledore.

And, yes, there was nothing at all creepy that went on between Harry and him. It was completely parental. If anything, he kept Harry too much at a distance all along, I think. Harry needed more parenting.
 
Posted by Alucard... (Member # 4924) on :
 
There always were rumors running around Hogwarts that "Dumbley" was a little light in his curly-toed elf booties. But saying that of a wizard is not too remarkable now, is it?
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
I totally think she should continue to answer the questions that her fans ask, if she wants to. She was responding to a question and talking to a lot of people who want to know more.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Unless the series is significantly re-written there's no way this tidbit of information will EVER be as important as certain people both inside and outside of the Potter fandom will make it out to be.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
quote:
Actually, as far as I can see they are her books, her characters, and her privilege to say or not say what she wants about them.
As far as I'm concerned, if it's not in the books, it ain't in the universe. She says that Harry and Ron became aurors. She's welcome to that opinion, but it's not part of the HP universe that I've enjoyed.

And if she ever does put it in a book, I still get to decide if that book is "canon" or not. As far as I'm concerned, the Force doesn't come from microorganisms.
 
Posted by Juxtapose (Member # 8837) on :
 
I'll revise my original "so what" to sort of agree with this
quote:
It gives so much more depth and poignance to the Grindelwald subplot. How sad!
It makes young Dumbledore's actions a bit more sympathetic, I think.

EDIT - it would also make older Dumbledore quite a bit more impressive to me. Imagine if he had ended up and old bitter man, jaded by love.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BlackBlade:
quote:
Originally posted by kmbboots:
quote:
Originally posted by Dan_raven:
Yeah, but it makes all those tender Harry/Dumbledore moments just a bit, I don't know, creepy.

Why?
Well imagine Dumbledore actually being a head mistress and saying/doing all those things with Harry from all the books. Are you saying the thought would have NEVER entered your mind that Dumbledelores (sorry couldn't help it) might MIGHT enjoy Harry's company for reasons outside maternalism?

edit: Personally to me, Dumbledore being gay changes nothing for me. Even knowing he was gay, I don't think I'd pick up on any sort of advances towards Harry, Dumbledore has way more class than that. I too however wish Rowling would stop spontaneously blurting out details about here characters that she did not include in the books. I'd rather not reread the books through a different lense every few years because she keeps doing it. Write an encyclopedia, and be done with it.

Swap out McGonagall for Dumbledore and make her headmistress and him the Transfiguration teacher. You almost don't have to, because I think there was a relationship there too that might have rivalled that of Harry and Dumbledore in some small way. I think that's a better comparison to make because the character is already established and we don't have to theorize about a theoretical Alberta Dumbledore. So answer this question, do you think McGonagall got some pleasure out of her duties other than some maternal or what not instinct, or in any way that suggests sexual feeling?

I highly doubt it, which I think perhaps speaks more to prejudice against gay people, that you'd even make that assumption or even wonder about it, when I highly doubt you would have under hetero circumstances.

I agree with those who said this gives a little added depth to the Gridelwald storyline, and to his younger years.

On the subject of Rowling throwing out random tidbits...I'd love to get my hands on that encyclopedia she keeps mentioning, but until then these random outbursts are quickly growing annoying. Hungry as I always am for more information from a favorite series, I don't like it in small doses.
 
Posted by theamazeeaz (Member # 6970) on :
 
The "it would be creepy if Dumbledore was female" thing is kind of insulting. Was Harry and Mrs. Weasley's relationship "creepy"? She loved Harry too.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Remember the biography of Dumbledore? There was a chapter making unseemly allegations about Dumbledore and Harry. I thought that was so, so strange in the book - out of nowhere, completely out of place, utterly bizarre. Now I understand why it's there, but I think it still doesn't belong in the book. It's just...I mean, of all the hard and dangerous things in the book, hints about allegations of abuse of our hero is a little too much.

Dumbledore was never anything but parental to Harry, and to imply otherwise is a little gross.

However, it doesn't add anything to the story of Grindlewald. Rowling says it was unrequited, so whether it was an unrequited romantic crush or an unwise man-crush doesn't matter - it's the same story. It wasn't true love regardless - Grindlewald was still ruthless and Dumbledore still dazzled and foolish either way.
 
Posted by Nathan2006 (Member # 9387) on :
 
Don't Maiar choose their sex? If they do, there's no such thing as a 'gay' maiar. I could be wrong, though...

I could care less about Dumbledore's sexuality. If he was gay, I really feel that Rowling should have told us in the books... See how much more meaning would have been there? We've read DH, experienced no streneous emotion with regards to the Dumbledore/Grindwaller Relationship, and now she tells us about it so that we feel the gravity of the situation! She should have told us then! I want to be feeling what I feel now about the character back when I was first reading the books.

<sigh>

I guess it just goes to show what an intolerant bigot I am that I never thought that Dumbledore was gay. SIKE! Rowling got me.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
Evil people do use unseemly allegations about people's innocent relationships to damage people's trust and strength and their commitment to withstand evil. I've seen it happen (unfortunately) more than once. It's a really low and ugly thing to do, but it does happen.
 
Posted by Juxtapose (Member # 8837) on :
 
quote:
Remember the biography of Dumbledore? There was a chapter making unseemly allegations about Dumbledore and Harry. I thought that was so, so strange in the book - out of nowhere, completely out of place, utterly bizarre. Now I understand why it's there, but I think it still doesn't belong in the book. It's just...I mean, of all the hard and dangerous things in the book, hints about allegations of abuse of our hero is a little too much.

It seemed to me like exactly the kind of thing Rita Skeeter lived for. Regardless of Dumbledore's sexuality...or any other truth, for that matter.
 
Posted by BlackBlade (Member # 8376) on :
 
Look the only reason I can see it being creepy to some is that within homosexuality there IS a brand where an older sage like character cultivates sexual relationships with young inexperienced male adolescents.

Oscar Wilde comes to mind as an archetype for this.

And is it just me or whenever I post in this thread the words from the Van Halen's, "Hot For Teacher" keep going through my head.
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
I think Rowling has just held all this info in her head for a decade and is now bubbling over with it, especially when filled with a room of adoring fans who want to know everything.

But yeah, I would have liked to gotten more info in the final chapter...
 
Posted by Foust (Member # 3043) on :
 
Something like this could only happen in fantasy or sci fi. If an author from any other genre said something this random about one of their characters, they'd just get a blank stare. If its not in the text, its not in the story. Scifi/fantasy seems to work differently; the readers are more willing to accept that the universe extends beyond the edges of the book in a way that, say, Cormac McCarthy's don't.
 
Posted by dkw (Member # 3264) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BlackBlade:
Look the only reason I can see it being creepy to some is that within homosexuality there IS a brand where an older sage like character cultivates sexual relationships with young inexperienced male adolescents.

And it's just as common with heterosexual men seeking out young inexperienced female adolescents. And, as we've seen in recent teacher scandals, it happens with older women and teenage boys as well.
 
Posted by Tante Shvester (Member # 8202) on :
 
I don't know what the big deal is. I always assumed that Dumbledore was gay.
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
Tante, to borrow a phrase, you crack me the heck up.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
The biggest problem with Rowling comments is that they aren't consistent. She contradicts her self every other day.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
Really? What has she said that's contradictory?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
In one interview she said Ron went in to business with George at the Joke shop. In another she said he became an Auror with Harry.

I'll have to see if I can come up with more. I don't follow it that closely.
 
Posted by kojabu (Member # 8042) on :
 
I believe he did the joke shop before becoming an Auror.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
OK, now does anybody see why I find it a waste of my time to have Rowling coming out with all this, in dribs and drabs, unpredictably, in no good order? These discussions could go on for years, and almost certainly will. It's largely pointless to even make clear definitive statements of fact about the characters and their motivations if this keeps going. I feel like I should have waited for her to die before I read the last book.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
steven if you don't want to know, you can just avoid threads about it and stuff, can't you? I mean, is it really that hard?
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
You really don't see it as a waste of your time, Tatiana?

I'd pretty much have to run screaming from Ornery, Hatrack, Sake River, etc, etc., etc., ad infinitum, to completely miss such things. This is the kind of thing they might even mention on the news, on a slow night.

I mean, whatever.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Don't Maiar choose their sex? If they do, there's no such thing as a 'gay' maiar. I could be wrong, though...
The Valar have inherent gender, and the forms they take reflect this (in other words, their gender does not reflect their choice of bodily form; rather, their bodily form reflects their inherent gender. See the second to last page of the Ainulindale (the first section of the Silmarillion):

"But when they desire to clothe themselves the Valar take upon them forms some of as male and some as of female; for that difference of temper they had even from their beginning, and it is but bodied forth in the choice of each, not made by choice, even as with us male and female may be shown by the raiment but is not made thereby."

There's no explicit statement that the same applies to the Maiar, but the Valar and the Maiar are the same type of being (collectively the Ainur), "of the same order as the Valar but of less degree." See "Of the Maiar" in the Valaquenta.

There are numerous references to specifically male and female Maiar: Osse and Uinen are husband and wife; Olorin is specifically referred to as a he; Melian is the wife of Thingol; and Arien who guides the Sun is a "maiden" and Tilion was "he that steered the island of the moon."

I can't find anything that suggests the Maiar are genderless, and everything I know about Tolkien and his beliefs makes me think this is intentional.

[ October 20, 2007, 09:57 PM: Message edited by: Dagonee ]
 
Posted by Eowyn-sama (Member # 11096) on :
 
Yeah, I'm willing to bet that Tolkien would agree with C.S. Lewis' theory (or at least the theory expressed in his fantasy) that masculine and feminine qualities are extra-physical and that the human male and female are merely an expression of these qualities. (See Perelandra and That Hideous Strength for the full explanation)

edit: I'm not sure what this has to do with Dumbledore, sorry!
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I was there [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Flaming Toad on a Stick (Member # 9302) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Foust:
Something like this could only happen in fantasy or sci fi. If an author from any other genre said something this random about one of their characters, they'd just get a blank stare. If its not in the text, its not in the story. Scifi/fantasy seems to work differently; the readers are more willing to accept that the universe extends beyond the edges of the book in a way that, say, Cormac McCarthy's don't.

Not this reader, at least.

And I can't really see why Dumbledore being gay makes those parts of the book any more powerful.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by steven:
You really don't see it as a waste of your time, Tatiana?

I'd pretty much have to run screaming from Ornery, Hatrack, Sake River, etc, etc., etc., ad infinitum, to completely miss such things. This is the kind of thing they might even mention on the news, on a slow night.

I mean, whatever.

So instead, we should not think or talk about things that we care about, and consider to be worth our time, in order to spare you? Where are you going with this? [Smile]
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
They didn't get it totally accurate.
She said, "Actually I always thought of him as gay." or something like that. She said in the 6th movie they were to have some annoying part about Dumbledore telling Harry about some girl he liked, but JKR put a sticky saying HE'S GAY on the line.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
"So instead, we should not think or talk about things that we care about, and consider to be worth our time, in order to spare you? Where are you going with this?"

I don't care that much, for myself. I'd have said nothing if others had said nothing.

What's going to be annoying is if, in 40 years, she's all "Harry's a girl, Hermione's a house plant, and Dobby was Voldemort's love child", or some equally ridiculous stuff.
 
Posted by Threads (Member # 10863) on :
 
While Rowling may write the books, we each have our own unique vision of the story. If you can't stand the idea of Dumbledore being gay then don't make him gay in your mind. I see nothing wrong with personally altering details that don't make or break a story. There have been numerous occasions where I've missed, say, a physical description of a character and haven't realized until I've already formed a mental image of the character. If this happens I generally just keep my own image of the character and toss out the author's (most recent example I can think of is when I made a main character a brunette rather than a blond because that was my initial impression of her). Dumbledore's sexual preference hardly plays a major role in the series, so it's not a big deal to ignore the fact that Rowling made him gay. In retrospect I think it makes sense in the context of Dumbledore's actions (especially from books six and seven), but it's not something to get distressed about if you don't like the idea.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
quote:
And I can't really see why Dumbledore being gay makes those parts of the book any more powerful.
Because he was in love with Grindelwald. Think about it. Dumbledore spends his life unable to find anyone who is his intellectual equal, because he's just so darn smart, and then he finally meets someone who IS, and he falls for him like a ton of bricks, thereby suspending his usually excellent powers of critical judgment. And then everything goes spectacularly to hell when Grindelwald attacks the family; Dumbledore then has to deal with the knowledge that the aforementioned suspension of critical judgment killed his sister; and later on, he has to go forth and do battle against the only person he's ever been in love with. And conquer him and lock him up in a prison all alone for the rest of his life. Because he can't decently do anything else.

Ouch. That hurts my heart. Poor guy.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Me too.
Poor Dumbledore. It's amazing that he became such an awesome person despite all the stuff he went through

Which is one theme of this story.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
If the suspension of critical judgment is based on Dumbledore's falling for Grindelwald like a ton of bricks, I think it makes the whole recollection less powerful: it transforms a seduction by an appealing but ultimately evil philosophy into romantic desire overriding good sense, reducing a powerful theme of means and ends into an after school special.

Note that this objection is not based solely on D being gay, but on reinterpreting that as the reason for D's flirtation with "for their own good" justifications for totalitarianism.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
Dumbledore's gayness doesn't bother me. It's the inexplicable lameness of it all that is trying to one's patience. She clearly thought out which scenes would go in the books, and which ones wouldn't, and how certain scenes would be written, and did an excellent job of planning all that out. It was wonderful, though I wouldn't cry if she let OSC or Stephen King do a rewrite. I like her little world, and her story, but those guys have better writing chops. They know it, too, and say it, too. It's funny.

What she didn't think out was how to reveal the things that never made it into the books. She needs to hire somebody to advise her on that, preferably, again, OSC, or Stephen King.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Dumbledore being infatuated with Grindlewald doesn't really make the story all that more poignant to me than if the friendship had had no element of attraction.

And we still know very little of Dumbledore's life beyond the few tidbits divulged in the books. I hesitate to say Grindlewald was the only intellectual great Dumbledore encountered, or even was attracted to. We don't know. That way lies a thousand emo slash fan-fics. [Smile]
 
Posted by KarlEd (Member # 571) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
If the suspension of critical judgment is based on Dumbledore's falling for Grindelwald like a ton of bricks, I think it makes the whole recollection less powerful: it transforms a seduction by an appealing but ultimately evil philosophy into romantic desire overriding good sense, reducing a powerful theme of means and ends into an after school special.

Note that this objection is not based solely on D being gay, but on reinterpreting that as the reason for D's flirtation with "for their own good" justifications for totalitarianism.

Which could very well be why she didn't put it in the book.

I think it's very common for authors to give characters backstory and details of personal history that never makes it into the actual book, but nonetheless may influence it.

Also, it's not at all exclusive to Sci-fi or Fantasy (as Foust suggests) that characters exist in a world beyond the words on the published page. Heck, entire English departments thrive on discussing the implications that the words on the page might reveal about the story's larger universe, across nearly every genre.
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
Something I loved about Roger Zelazny's writing was that his characters had lives beyond his books. Before he started a novel, he would frequently write long stories or even novellas about his characters that were never meant to be published, just to give them a history they could refer to.
 
Posted by Saephon (Member # 9623) on :
 
I just thought of something:
What if all those uber-conservative Christians and ministers are now afraid the books will turn children into gay wizards [Big Grin]
 
Posted by JonHecht (Member # 9712) on :
 
[ROFL]
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
I have no problems with her coming out with extra facts about her characters. All writers do it; most of us don't have the platform that Rowling has, so when we talk about our characters extra-literary lives, no one really pays attention.

Foust, your comments about this phenomenon in speculative fiction vs. mainstream fiction are wrong. Reworks have been done of Little Women, Les Miserable, the Phantom of the Opera, Gone with the Wind...

The part of her interview that bothered me most was her saying that HP could be taken as an extended metaphor for tolerance. I don't really see it.
 
Posted by 0Megabyte (Member # 8624) on :
 
Oddly enough, I was thinkin gsomething similar when I first read this.

"Just great. Now the fundies have another stupid thing to take a pot shot at in this series."
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
It was one of those "innately evil and stupid fundamentalist Christians" who first introduced me to the Harry Potter, strongly recommending that I read it. Because she felt it was so good, and destined to be great.

Just sayin'.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
quote:
If the suspension of critical judgment is based on Dumbledore's falling for Grindelwald like a ton of bricks, I think it makes the whole recollection less powerful: it transforms a seduction by an appealing but ultimately evil philosophy into romantic desire overriding good sense, reducing a powerful theme of means and ends into an after school special.
Sorry; I wasn't clear. That seduction by an evil philosophy is certainly going on too, and it is quite moving: These ideas are incredibly seductive to Dumbledore; he's a lonely, brilliant kid who's had to put his life permanently on hold because with matters as they presently stand, his sister cannot be accepted by his community.

But I also think there's something else going on, which is that Dumbledore is lying to himself about Grindelwald because he's in love with him. It's sad because it's true, that's what people do. I know I've been there. You tell yourself lies about the person you love so that you can continue to believe that's a person you can be with. It's always painful when you eventually have to admit you were wrong. But imagine if you had to define your entire life, as Dumbledore clearly does, by (some pretty terrible) mistakes you made as a result of the lies you told yourself about someone.

As I said, ouch.
 
Posted by BlackBlade (Member # 8376) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by dkw:
quote:
Originally posted by BlackBlade:
Look the only reason I can see it being creepy to some is that within homosexuality there IS a brand where an older sage like character cultivates sexual relationships with young inexperienced male adolescents.

And it's just as common with heterosexual men seeking out young inexperienced female adolescents. And, as we've seen in recent teacher scandals, it happens with older women and teenage boys as well.
You are correct which is why I initially posited the "Dumbledelores" scenario. If Harry Potter (Henriette Potter?) had been a girl this whole time and Dumbledore had had the same intimate close relationship with "her" there would also be to some that hint of, "Is Dumbledore a creepy old man?"

I personally don't see it in any of the text, I think Dumbledore is a wonderful man that I'd very much enjoy knowing, I'm simply saying how I can see the revelation of Dumbledore's homosexuality, for some, changes the lens they see the books through, and to me it's not completely unreasonable.

0Megabyte: I read plenty of movie reviews, and many of my friends trashed the movie, "Signs" because in the end *SPOILERS!* I SAY AGAIN *SPOILERS* Mel Gibson's problems are solved by his reborn faith in God.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Ridiculous
Dumbledore isn't a creapy old man, but a warm loving father figure.

But it's a shame he has to be at a distance most of the time because he's forging a weapon against Voldermort most of the time.
 
Posted by Elizabeth (Member # 5218) on :
 
Dumbledore is not gay. He is a metrosexual.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

The part of her interview that bothered me most was her saying that HP could be taken as an extended metaphor for tolerance. I don't really see it.

Given that the bad guys are all wealthy snobs who want to institute a master race, and the good guys are a bunch of ragtag weirdos who're disinclined to play society's games, I can see where she's going with this. It's still not an extended metaphor, but certainly tolerance of the different is one of the running themes.
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scott R:

The part of her interview that bothered me most was her saying that HP could be taken as an extended metaphor for tolerance. I don't really see it.

Are you being facetious here? I ask because it would be kind of hard to miss. The whole point was about accepting diversity. The "bad guys" were bad guys because because they thought only people like themselves were people. Goodness half their rhetoric could be lifted from Nazi propaganda.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
There is a difference between a theme and an extended metaphor.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by steven:
OK, now does anybody see why I find it a waste of my time to have Rowling coming out with all this, in dribs and drabs, unpredictably, in no good order? These discussions could go on for years, and almost certainly will. It's largely pointless to even make clear definitive statements of fact about the characters and their motivations if this keeps going. I feel like I should have waited for her to die before I read the last book.

You really do seem to think that is wrong for people to say things you don't want to hear. It must be lovely to be the center of the universe.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
Lisa, go pet a kitty or something. You're way too prickly.
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
How are you defining "metaphor" in such a way that the goals of the purebloods/death eaters is not a metaphor for intolerance and racism?
 
Posted by theamazeeaz (Member # 6970) on :
 
I don't see the random tidbits as random.

Rowling's on a book tour and kids ask questions about character's backstories because they know she invented them. Look how rich the personalities of all the minor characters are.

This particular tour is her first book signing tour in the US since book 3.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
kmboots--

I'm not being facetious. If the series was meant to be an extended metaphor on tolerance, then we should have seen more of what redeeming features the scrappy non-conformists saw in Muggle and Mudblood societies.

But we didn't really; the argument that we didn't see these things because we LIVE them is a false one-- the metaphor would have required someone from a separate culture than our own to evaluate and define Muggle/Mudblood as worthwhile.

There were no strong Muggle characters presented to strengthen the metaphor.

I'd argue that tolerance wasn't even really a theme-- wise/good use of inherent/unearned power was though. No one in any of the seven books mentioned integrating with the Muggles; no one mentioned that the Secrecy codes were evil in and of themselves. (As far as I can remember)

In my opinion the theme of tolerance is shallow within the Potterverse.

But you're welcome to have other opinions.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
I actually agree with Scott, sort of, although I think Rowling does, to some degree, consider tolerance a "virtue".

I see the books as a major WWII metaphor. Come on, you've got Hitler, part-Jewish, who wants to lead a bunch of pure-blood Germans, and Voldemort, part-Muggle, who wants to lead a bunch of purebloods.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
no one mentioned that the Secrecy codes were evil in and of themselves.
Exactly. As long as the wizards reserve for themselves the right to invade Muggles' minds and determine what they think and remember, the wizard society is based on a fundamentally immoral structure. The only one who ever questions this is Harry, and he accepts Hagrid's explanation without question.
 
Posted by C3PO the Dragon Slayer (Member # 10416) on :
 
What I find creepy is what Dumbledore was thinking when he was with, not Grindlewald, but Nicholas Flamel. THAT's the creepy part.
 
Posted by DDDaysh (Member # 9499) on :
 
Ok... personally I find it creepy that anyone bothered to think of Dumbledore's sexuality at all. I mean come ON, he wasn't just old, he was ancient!

Not once, in ANY of the seven books, did I wonder what his sex life was like.
 
Posted by Damien.m (Member # 8462) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
quote:
no one mentioned that the Secrecy codes were evil in and of themselves.
Exactly. As long as the wizards reserve for themselves the right to invade Muggles' minds and determine what they think and remember, the wizard society is based on a fundamentally immoral structure. The only one who ever questions this is Harry, and he accepts Hagrid's explanation without question.
SS/PS page 13
McGonagall: "A fine thing it would be if, on the very day You-Know-Who seems to have disappeared at last, the Muggles found out about us all."

Shes not calling the secrecy laws evil or anything but it shows that the wise, at least, wish the truth to be known.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
She was being sarcastic. She doesn't think the secrecy laws are bad at all nor does she want the Muggles to find out about the Wizarding World.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
quote:
Not once, in ANY of the seven books, did I wonder what his sex life was like.
Then it's awfully fortunate for you that she didn't say anything about his sex life (she said tartly).
 
Posted by Damien.m (Member # 8462) on :
 
"She was being sarcastic. She doesn't think the secrecy laws are bad at all nor does she want the Muggles to find out about the Wizarding World."

Thats your opinion. But I prefer to believe mine:)

Edited to add the quote. I thought it might be weird if I was replying to Fyfe's post. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
I don't see how the sarcasm works, exactly, although it makes sense, coming from her.

Why would she rather that Wizards/Witches become commonly known before than after Voldemort's disappearance?

Unfortunately, I can't locate my copy right now, it's probably under 3 layers of other stuff somewhere. My room's a bit of a mess.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
"She was being sarcastic. She doesn't think the secrecy laws are bad at all nor does she want the Muggles to find out about the Wizarding World."

Thats your opinion. But I prefer to believe mine:)

In the paragraphs before she says that, she states that she thinks people would be more careful in their celebrating and calls someone who made shooting stars "stupid."

She also says it's no reason for wizards to lose their heads, and calls them careless.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
I don't see how the sarcasm works, exactly, although it makes sense, coming from her.

Why would she rather that Wizards/Witches become commonly known before than after Voldemort's disappearance?

She's not saying she would rather they become known before V's disappearance. She's comparing the good thing - V's downfall - and the potential bad thing. It's Alanys Morissette type irony, winning the lottery and dying the very next day.
 
Posted by Damien.m (Member # 8462) on :
 
I know what she says. But as steven says why would she rather that the truth become known after Voldemorts demise?

That whole section of the conversation isnt coherent IMO. But again, considering I cant come to a definate conclusion about the intent of the remark, I would rather believe that what bshe says is sincere.
 
Posted by steven (Member # 8099) on :
 
Thanks, Dag. I swear I have a copy somewhere, I must have read it 4 times...actually, hmm...I think I let my daughter borrow it.
 
Posted by Damien.m (Member # 8462) on :
 
Oh, yeah I geddit now. Thanks.
 
Posted by Damien.m (Member # 8462) on :
 
Sorry Dag I posted ^^^ that before I read your post.

Ive never seen it that way before. I guess that because I read it when I was seven and didnt catch the sarcasm it just never struck me on later reads.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
And BEING a fairly typical, Traditional Mormon/Christian dad, I'm profoundly NOT WORRIED at all about my children learning homosexuality from Dumbledore.
 
Posted by MandyM (Member # 8375) on :
 
I pulled out my copy of SS and I agree, McGonagall was being sarcastic. The quote is on page 10 of my book though. It is a hardback copy of the American version of The Sorcerer's Stone if that makes any difference.

quote:
I never really was in favor of a Neville-Luna relationship; I can see him wanting to marry her, but I don't think she'd have him. Her marrying a weird-creatures-finder guy is much more better, I feel.
I just picture the two of them rebuiding that weird house and living there together with her editing the magazine and him growing weird plants in the yard on his breaks from Hogwarts. The first person I thought of when I read the weird-creature-finder guy is Hagrid! [Smile]

I don't care that JKR is revealing a bunch of stuff after the fact but I would rather her just write another book. I would love to read a companion novel like Ender's Shadow where we find out what happened at Hogwarts that last year. She could reveal a bunch of this info in a book like that.

I also don't really care if DD is gay but I do think she may be alienating some of her audience with that revelation. Not that it's right and not that she should make all her characters straight for fear of what people will think but it will certainly happen.

[ October 21, 2007, 04:57 PM: Message edited by: MandyM ]
 
Posted by pooka (Member # 5003) on :
 
quote:
I don't know what the big deal is. I always assumed that Dumbledore was gay.
But you claim to assume that about everyone, Tante.

I have to say this wasn't a huge surprise. I mean, it's pretty tame compared to the rumors about his brother.
 
Posted by Makerofthings (Member # 3979) on :
 
I think there was a reason she did not tell people about Dumbledore until after the last book had come out and the dust had settled. She wanted the work as a whole to be accepted and digested for a certain amount of time so that Dumbledore could be fully seen. THen when she told us he was gay, we already love and understand him. This is a huge way of underlining her statement of tolerance which is the main theme in the books. We have been manipulated. Do not underestimate this woman for a second! She is my hero.
 
Posted by stihl1 (Member # 1562) on :
 
I think she made it up on the fly.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Makerofthings:
I think there was a reason she did not tell people about Dumbledore until after the last book had come out and the dust had settled. She wanted the work as a whole to be accepted and digested for a certain amount of time so that Dumbledore could be fully seen. THen when she told us he was gay, we already love and understand him. This is a huge way of underlining her statement of tolerance which is the main theme in the books. We have been manipulated. Do not underestimate this woman for a second! She is my hero.

Personally, since the Harry Potter series has -never- delved into certain aspects of the character's lives, I feel it would have been out of place and distracting in a mostly-sexuality-free series.


However, if your viewpoint is her true motivations, then it makes me think a lot -less- of Rowling. Waiting until the series is over? Waiting until she won't have to put it in the real book itself, but let it slip as a random comment? That sounds very little like a master plan to promote tolerance and more like a tactic to not tick off her publishers. [Smile]
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Indeed, I think better of Rowling than that.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
Me too.

Plus when I thought about it, I couldn't really think when she would have given us this information. In the first six books, we don't know anything about Dumbledore's personal life, because he's not forthcoming about it. Besides which, I'm getting the vibe that he's been alone his whole life (bless him), so the only thing we could really have learned about was Grindelwald, and we couldn't learn about Grindelwald until the last book.

So okay, she could have told us in Deathly Hallows (that would have pleased me), but honestly, she's been working on these books for, what, twenty years? You can see where she might not want to turn the culmination of all that work into the Dumbledore Is Gay Show, and might instead want people to focus on the actual plot with the defeating Voldemort and the proving me totally right about Snape in every particular.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
What's interesting about this is that it seems like the media is assuming that if Rowling says Dumbledore is gay, then Dumbledore IS gay. Had she written something about it in the book, then she could have chosen Dumbledore's sexual preference. But at this point, assuming she is composing no more Harry Potter books, her interpretation of the series isn't any more correct than any other person's. She can't make Dumbledore gay just by declaring it so any more than OSC could. That's up to the reader to interpret.

Having said that, as a reader, I have to say that this is probably the first time Dumbledore's sexual preferences ever crossed my mind. He could be gay, or maybe not. I'm not sure it really impacts the story in any way.

It does raise an interesting question about Hogwarts that I'd never thought of before. Is every teacher at Hogwarts single? Dumbledore seemed to be unmarried, but that never seemed in any way out of the ordinary because everyone else at Hogwarts seems to be unmarried too.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
quote:
What's interesting about this is that it seems like the media is assuming that if Rowling says Dumbledore is gay, then Dumbledore IS gay. Had she written something about it in the book, then she could have chosen Dumbledore's sexual preference. But at this point, assuming she is composing no more Harry Potter books, her interpretation of the series isn't any more correct than any other person's. She can't make Dumbledore gay just by declaring it so any more than OSC could. That's up to the reader to interpret.
Somehow, I just knew you'd show up.

[Smile]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:
Had she written something about it in the book, then she could have chosen Dumbledore's sexual preference. But at this point, assuming she is composing no more Harry Potter books, her interpretation of the series isn't any more correct than any other person's.
Why?
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I dont know, she's the one who wrote it, she knows it up and down, inside and out, she's got volumes of notes in her head and on paper.
Of course her interpretation is the most correct since she wrote the book.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
"Had she written something about it in the book, then she could have chosen Dumbledore's sexual preference. But at this point, assuming she is composing no more Harry Potter books, her interpretation of the series isn't any more correct than any other person's."

Why?

Because fiction novels, or at least ones like the Harry Potter books, are not read to find out what is in JK Rowling's mind. A child doesn't normally pick up the book and think "I wonder what the author is intending to tell me in this." It's not like reading a letter or an essay where the goal is to accurately figure out what the author is trying to tell you.

Rather, a reader picks up a novel like Harry Potter in order to use his or her own mind/imagination. The words written by the author are the tool through which the reader does it, but ultimately the reading of a story is pretty much a matter between the reader and himself (or herself). Thus the meaning of the story is really up to how the reader interprets the author's words.

If there are some who read Harry Potter in order to try to speculate on the contents of JK Rowlings mind, then I suppose that for those readers it does matter what she thinks Dumbledore's sexual preferences are. But I would tend to think the average reader picks up a book for the reasons I do: To find out who these characters are, what happens to them, and to eventually care about them. In those cases the characters I am referring to are not necessarily the ones that were in Rowling mind as she wrote the words, but the one's we are imagining as we read those words.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
And, practically speaking, the reason why I think all that matters is because I'm sure now there's going to be a bunch of people on the political Right who will be unable to enjoy this series simply because Rowling claimed one of the most heroic characters is gay. I think that is a shame. They should not feel it necessary to withhold a great series of books like this from their kids just because the author's interpretation of it conflicts with their particular religious values. If they can get joy from reading it by interpreting the characters in a different way, that is more meaningful to them, I think they should.

[ October 22, 2007, 11:19 AM: Message edited by: Tresopax ]
 
Posted by Mucus (Member # 9735) on :
 
Practically speaking, the number of readers that probably have kept up with these after-publication notes is probably relatively small. More significantly, the number of future readers that will encounter these notes before reading the books is probably even smaller.

Thus, we're really concerned about the group of readers that have read the books, kept up with the notes, and are so disturbed by the notice that Dumbledore is gay that they enjoy the books less, despite that there is not much concrete evidence that any of Dumbledore's actions were influenced by his sexual orientation.

That is, they are so disturbed by the mere presence of a gay character in their reading material whether or not they act that way, that it has a profound impact on how they enjoy it.

I would say that people in this position have a bigger problem that just their ability to enjoy a children's book, particularly when they start reading about Roman, Greek, or Chinese history [Wink]
 
Posted by pooka (Member # 5003) on :
 
I don't think there are very many people who got over the whole witch and wizard thing who would then be turned off by Dumbledore being gay, speaking as someone who use to object to the witch and wizard thing.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by MandyM:
the American version of The Sorcerer's Stone

Isn't that redundant?
 
Posted by Tinros (Member # 8328) on :
 
You know, I'd honestly be upset if she DIDN'T have back story on all the characters. It's just a part of good story writing, in my mind. How do we know she DOESN'T have all of it written down, and was just answering a simple question? For all we know, she could have been planning on putting that in the encyclopedia thing, and only revealed it because someone asked a question to which that information would be relevant.

If that makes any sense.
 
Posted by Foust (Member # 3043) on :
 
quote:
Foust, your comments about this phenomenon in speculative fiction vs. mainstream fiction are wrong. Reworks have been done of Little Women, Les Miserable, the Phantom of the Opera, Gone with the Wind...
"Reworks"? Do you mean the author went back and changed the text for a new edition?

If so, that's not the same thing. Changing the text and moving completely outside of it are different.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
I should probably have said, "sequels or prequels that significantly alter the original character(s)."

Anyway-- the market for alternative/extracurricular information regarding particular stories is just as prevalent in the literary fiction market as it is in speculative fiction.
 
Posted by MandyM (Member # 8375) on :
 
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by MandyM:
the American version of The Sorcerer's Stone
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Isn't that redundant?

My understanding is that The Sorcerer's Stone sold in Canada has different page numbers than the one sold in the U.S. I could be wrong.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
Ah. I didn't realize that Canadians were as dumb as US Americans.

My biggest hope and prayer about Harry Potter is that some fine day, they'll see fit to change the word back to Philosopher's in the books and movies in the US.
 
Posted by solo (Member # 3148) on :
 
No, we had The Philosopher's Stone up here. We have the same covers/paging as the UK edition in Canada.
 
Posted by Ron Lambert (Member # 2872) on :
 
Who cares if Dumbledore was gay. He is a fictional character. His sexual orientation never had any impact on the story that I can tell.

Imagine the reaction of the gay community if Rowlings had said that Voldemort was gay!
 
Posted by Saephon (Member # 9623) on :
 
Uh oh, incoming Snape X Voldemort.
Now we really know how Severus convinced the Dark Lord of his allegiance [Evil Laugh]
 
Posted by MattP (Member # 10495) on :
 
quote:
Who cares if Dumbledore was gay. He is a fictional character. His sexual orientation never had any impact on the story that I can tell.

Imagine the reaction of the gay community if Rowlings had said that Voldemort was gay!

I imagine the reaction would mirror the religious reaction to Dumbledore being gay.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
She didn't mention that Dumbledore was gay.

She also didn't mention which characters were right handed or left handed, which had tattoos, or other than Harry, who had any interesting birthmarks. There were a lot if unimportant details that she left out, frankly because they were unimportant.
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
BWHAHAHAHAHAHAHA-snort-HAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!

When I read that (elsewhere), my first thought was basically "Okay." *shrug* "Makes sense." By which I mean it makes sense in the context of the books, just the way Snape's love for Lily made sense of his past actions. That was necessary to the plot, while this isn't. But it makes sense.

My second thought was that it would be (in certain circles) like somebody threw a bees' nest into a church social and then barred all the doors.

A wate of time? *shrug* visiting forums is a waste of time- a pleasant one that people often find worthwhile, yes- but it's not like any of us are curing cancer.

The AUTHOR has no more right than a random person to say DD is gay because it wasn't in the books?

Pick any author and tell them a favorite character whose sex life is never mentioned or relevant to the plot and tell them the character is gay and see what happens.

It's all a tempest in a teapot. An interesting diversion, but not earthshaking in any sense.
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
I don't think it's an agenda, retroactive change, or even a surprising thing at all. I think it's part of the character she defined for herself that she didn't spell out, that nevertheless informed his motivations that she could now mention because the books are over and someone asked her. Nothing more than that. For those who are interested this fact perhaps adds another layer to his actions.
 
Posted by Foust (Member # 3043) on :
 
quote:
Heck, entire English departments thrive on discussing the implications that the words on the page might reveal about the story's larger universe, across nearly every genre.
Sorry, I didn't see this before. What you're talking about is still different from what Rowling is doing, and from what fan fiction does (especially slash fiction). You're talking about the words on the page. As far as I know, there's nothing in the Harry Potter books themselves that suggest Dumbledore is gay.

quote:
I should probably have said, "sequels or prequels that significantly alter the original character(s)."

Anyway-- the market for alternative/extracurricular information regarding particular stories is just as prevalent in the literary fiction market as it is in speculative fiction.

Sequels and prequels are new texts. What you're talking about is more like putting Rowlings comments about Dumbledore into the mouth of a character in a new edition of some Potter book.

And, again, what English departments do - unless there's a branch of literary theory I'm completely unaware of - is work with the text as it is. Yes, they hunt for the holes and the voids in the texts and speculate - but the text is the basis.

Again, assuming there's nothing in the text suggesting Dumbledore is gay, what Rowling is doing is basically equivalent to George Lucas explaining the differences in the light saber battles between the original trilogy and the prequels by talking about the physical limitations of the characters rather than the limitations of special effects in 1977. Lucas is going outside the text to add something.
 
Posted by the_Somalian (Member # 6688) on :
 
Rowling says Cedric Diggory was actually bisexual.

Rowling says Gilderoy Lockhart was actually Korean.

Rowling says...
 
Posted by C3PO the Dragon Slayer (Member # 10416) on :
 
How could a blonde be Korean? [ROFL] [Dont Know]
 
Posted by Artemisia Tridentata (Member # 8746) on :
 
quote:
How could a blonde be Korean?
Underdone, Check the Popol Voh!
 
Posted by Joldo (Member # 6991) on :
 
Bottle blond, C3PO.

Cedric was bisexual. And had a fancy for young Gryffindors.

Good lord, he invited Harry to go to the Prefects' Bathroom with him . . .
 
Posted by the_Somalian (Member # 6688) on :
 
Come on guys.

Rowling SAYS...
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Dumbledore apparently had no romantic relationships in his life except for one unrequited summer crush when he was a teenager.

That's not gay. That's celibate.

If it was supposed to be a lifelong unrequited thing like Snape's, then he has appalling taste. What wise adult holds onto a crush on evil? Dumbledore didn't seem like that much of a fool.

To answer the above question: Bellatrix LeStrange, clearly, except for the "wise" part.

Thwarted or twisted love of all kinds seemed to have driven the complicated adults in Harry Potter. None of them got over it, either - they all apparently stuck to the love or the inclination that got to when still just a kid. I suppose that's a staple of fairy tales - "And then the princess got over it, met someone else, and only thought of the prince occasionally with bemusement or fondness once a year or so."

The exception being Robin McKinley's Aerin, and I swear on my life that's part of what those books so utterly great. [Smile]

[ October 22, 2007, 11:27 PM: Message edited by: katharina ]
 
Posted by dkw (Member # 3264) on :
 
kat, I agree with all of your post except one nitpick. Celibate is not asexual. Celibate people are still either homosexual, heterosexual, or bisexual, they just don't act on it.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
I agree. What I was trying to say was that possible objections to making Dumbledore gay from the imaginary opponents mentioned above might be different than previously described because there is a difference between inclinations and acting on them.

I don't agree with the above classifications, though. I think it is definitely more of a continuum than anything, so there are considerably more than three options.

Hmm...more than that, too, if you take the other dimension into account - how interested/invested they are in love/sex in general. So any particular individual's romantic interest could be graphed on a plane with the X-variable being gender preference and the y-variable being personal importance of romantic relations.

For Dumbledore, whatever the gender preference, it sure looks like the personal importance of romantic relations was pretty low. Whether it was native to him or else induced by traumatic experiences I couldn't say. If induced by traumatic experiences...I don't know - if the personal importance was high, I'm thinking he'd have found a way.

--

Thinking about it, the love lives of Harry's generation were a great deal more complex (and real, I think). Harry did have a crush and then got over it. Cho picked one of two boys she liked and was happy, but probably would have been happy the other way as well. After the first died, she tried to have a relationship with the other but wasn't done grieving.

Ginny had a hopeless crush on Harry and then ignored it to date other people. Hermione dated Victor before Ron, Ron dated Lavender before Hermione, and Harry was crushed on by a quarter of the school, like you'd expect. The previous generations' practice of only one significant other per lifetime is bizarre in comparison.

[ October 23, 2007, 10:34 AM: Message edited by: Javert Hugo ]
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
The previous generations' practice of only one signifigant other per lifetime is bizarre in comparison.
I don't think we can assume that just because the books don't tell us about any past relationships by the teachers, it means they never had any. After all, the series takes the perspective of the students. When you were in high school, were you informed about the past romanatic relationships of all your single teachers?

It should also be noted that being single is different from being celibate. It is possible Dumbledore would have gotten married, had he found the right person.
 
Posted by Steve_G (Member # 10101) on :
 
I'm just glad she had the brains to not include it in the books. That would have been such a distraction to such a good series of books without adding anything meaningful to the story at hand.

The closeness between Dumbledore and Grindelwald came through quite well in the text and never once did I think they might be lovers. Not every close same sex friendship need be sexual.

Now had Reeta Skeeter been the one to drop the bombshell, that would have been different, because it would fit the outrageous accusations she's known for. Whether its true or not can be left to the reader to decide, but since most of the stuff she wrote actually did have some basis in fact it would be hard not to conclude that there might have been something more to their close friendship.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
Lots of things are possible. We could spend all day imagining the untold details. I believe there is even a slightly-crude term for that activity.

--

In New York, Rowling said it was unrequited.
 
Posted by Christine (Member # 8594) on :
 
DUmbledore is not gay. It was not in the books, therefore it isn't true. I don't care what's in Rowling's notes. If it was important, she'd have put it in the books.

That's not to say that Dumbledore being gay would have changed the story or his character. I'm just saying that the book is where the story is -- not the author's notes, speeches, or intentions.
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
For all you fans of New Criticism, there are other ways of looking at literature.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
It's almost like executive orders. Does it need to have "executive order" across the top to count? Just be signed by the president? Could it be the president's random remarks?

------

What critical lenses do you prefer besides New Criticism, kmboots?
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
I think that new Criticism is a good tool, but it isn't the only tool. I believe that, within reason, there are insights to be gained by understanding the context in which an author was writing, relevant biographical information. and certainly the author's stated intentions and information.

I have no idea where you are going with the executive order thing.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
This: Leave it to Texas to stop executive overreaching

--------

Why do intentions matter? And when? If it mattered that much, it would have been in the books.
 
Posted by fugu13 (Member # 2859) on :
 
Christine: then he isn't heterosexual, either.
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
I suppose they don't matter to people who are exclusively New Critics.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
That's not an answer - that's a circle.

Why should they matter to anyone?
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
If only the text itself mattered to English departments, I would not have been required to read two versions of Great Expectations, or lots of critcism debating whether Shakespeare actually wrote shakespeare's plays, or whether Homer was a woman.

If you read Mark Twain's books outside of their social context, they seem racist. Taken for the times for which they were written, they are actually rather progressive. Luckily for us, he talked a LOT. [Wink] It helps to illuminate some of his points more clearly.
 
Posted by MattP (Member # 10495) on :
 
quote:
DUmbledore is not gay. It was not in the books, therefore it isn't true. I don't care what's in Rowling's notes. If it was important, she'd have put it in the books.
Is he also not heterosexual, then?
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
And it often helps to know what social issues an author might have been addressing ("The Crucible" for example), or literary conventions of the specific culture in which an author wrote.

And really, kat, I don't want to engage in pointless debates with you here either.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
quote:
If only the text itself mattered to English departments, I would not have been required to read two versions of Great Expectations, or lots of critcism debating whether Shakespeare actually wrote shakespeare's plays, or whether Homer was a woman.

If you read Mark Twain's books outside of their social context, they seem racist. Taken for the times for which they were written, they are actually rather progressive. Luckily for us, he talked a LOT. It helps to illuminate some of his points more clearly.

All of this makes sense in divining more about the author, but what about more about the characters? Why do comments about what happened in the imagined world hold weight when they are not actually in that imagined world?

Like David Chase: http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/TV/10/23/tv.sopranos.davidchase.ap/index.html

Since he didn't include an ending or an arc or really even the last part of the story, does that story exist?

(My opinion: David Chase completely and utterly wimped out under the pressure of thinking of an ending and did the equivelent of turning in a blank test. I have to give him credit for not pretending it had deeper meaning, but that does only reinforce my initial impression.)

[ October 23, 2007, 06:26 PM: Message edited by: Javert Hugo ]
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
quote:
And really, kat, I don't want to engage in pointless debates with you here either.
Oh my stars.


Don't enter them then.
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
It seemed more impolite to just ignore your question to me, but if that makes more sense, I'll do that next time.
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
But, see, the thing with Great Expectations? Do we take the published ending, or the one the author wrote that was not published, but he preferred?

Personally, I liked the published one, though the other was probably more true. So for me, it was the first, because I like happy endings. My professors liked the other. *shrug* The question of which was "valid" - the published version of the one the author prefered, is a very similar one to this kind of debate.

Dumbledore was an old bachelor. She says he was a bachelor because he was gay, and had an unrequited longing for Darth Whatsis when he was younger.

*shrug*

I don't think it makes a difference, and I can't imagine what it would feel like to be disturbed by the news (as my Beloved was, but couldn't explain why- he certainly has no problems with gltb folks, as we work and socialize with several).

I wish I DID understand what it feels like to care about the sexual preferences of a fictional character (that isn't my own- it might impact certain things about their choices, which I might need to know, as a writer). It would make this discussion more sensical in my head.

Writers DO know things about their characters that sometimes don't make into stories. *shrug*

But I'm not going to tell them they don't have the right to answer a fan's question based on what they what they know that they didn't tell us.

If, say, someone made a textual a case for TEH GAY in all those naked boys running around battle school, and OSC said, "Oh, no they don't!" Wouldn't you take him at his word? I would.

Here's a link to Neil Gaiman's take on it:

http://www.neilgaiman.com/journal/2007/10/flowers-of-romance.html
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Neil Gaiman is a cool man.
 
Posted by Christine (Member # 8594) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by MattP:
quote:
DUmbledore is not gay. It was not in the books, therefore it isn't true. I don't care what's in Rowling's notes. If it was important, she'd have put it in the books.
Is he also not heterosexual, then?
Technically, he's pretty asexual because the books never mentioned one way or another and he never seemed to have a romantic relationship with anyone. But let's face it. The default position is straight. You don't have to specifically say that someone is straight. You do have to specifically say that someone is gay.
 
Posted by MattP (Member # 10495) on :
 
quote:
The default position is straight. You don't have to specifically say that someone is straight. You do have to specifically say that someone is gay.
And if a derivative work is produced in which he is gay, does he then become gay for real, or is he still straight in original books? That would be kind of weird.

Unless Rowling has said that nothing would ever be written about that character again (and she actually follows through on that promise), it seems that she's still the arbiter of such things. The Harry Potter story may be finished, but there's fertile ground for a prequel that touches on many of the past events referenced in the HP series.

Suppose I had an imaginary friend as a child and I wrote a series of books documenting the hijinks that I got into with this imaginary friend. Later, though this was never mentioned in my books, I announce that this imaginary friend was black. Who are you to tell me "no he's not" or "white is the default." It's *my* imaginary friend.
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
Actually, I think the default position (as in factory original settings) is probably much broader than that, even on an individual basis.

That is, I think we are born with potential capacity for experiencing sexual pleasure with a variety of people (of either gender), objects or animals. The rest is largely socialization and exposure. Exposure is how we develop a taste for things, and realize what we like.

I LOVE raspberries. Can you believe I never had raspberries until a few years ago? I liked raspberry filled donuts and raspberry jam, but I'd never had real, fresh raspberries. I wasn't sure I'd like them, even though all signs pointed to "yes". I could go my whole life knowing I liked raspberry sauce, or some such, and never have a raspberry. Or i could try a raspberry and have it be sour or over ripe, and never know that I was really, at heart, a raspberry girl.

Either way, it wouldn't have mattered much to my kids, or the students mentor, or to whatever I've done.

Same with Dubledore. [Big Grin] His preference was known to his creator, but not relevant to his role in the story. Seems fairly simple.

Not that I really care, but it is an interesting thought exercise.
 
Posted by FlyingCow (Member # 2150) on :
 
I'm curious. If she puts it in her (supposedly) upcoming encyclopedia of the Harry Potter world, does it then become canon?

Or would any non-novel works not be considered canon? And if that's so, are the two charity books she wrote canonical?
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
It's funny that people are objecting to this so much. I think if Dumbledore had turned out to be a goblin or from France or almost anything else nobody would have blinked an eye. Why is it so controversial that he's gay? Of course he's Rowling's character and what she says about him goes.
 
Posted by breyerchic04 (Member # 6423) on :
 
Tatiana, really I think most of the controversy is whether it's canon or not, since it was not in the book. I tend to think she's answering questions so yes it is, if she really was just blabbing no it wouldn't be.
 
Posted by MightyCow (Member # 9253) on :
 
I think this sort of thing is one of the strong reasons many authors don't approve of fan fiction. It's the author's story, and she gets to decide what is and isn't the case about the whole thing - regardless of whether or not it is now or ever will be in print.

Are we pretending that there's no longer any such thing as oral tradition?
 
Posted by Altáriël of Dorthonion (Member # 6473) on :
 
NO WAI
 
Posted by JonHecht (Member # 9712) on :
 
Of course that isn't implied, mighty cow. We are just saying that mediums should remain separate, that is why The Odyssey could never be written down as a book.
 
Posted by Lisa (Member # 8384) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Olivet:
But, see, the thing with Great Expectations? Do we take the published ending, or the one the author wrote that was not published, but he preferred?

I think a good example is Podkayne of Mars. I don't care that he originally killed her at the end of the book. That's not the book I read when I was growing up (which is a good thing, because it would have put me off of Heinlein for the rest of my life). And I won't buy a copy that has the "original ending".

Does the fact that it was eventually published with the bad ending after his death make it what really happened to Poddy? I don't think so.

But in this case, what Rowling is saying is consistent with what she wrote. I don't see the problem.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
If she puts it in her (supposedly) upcoming encyclopedia of the Harry Potter world, does it then become canon?
Ultimately that is up to each reader to decide. For instance, when I think of the Dune series I consider the original six books to be the true story, and don't lump in all the newly written ones as part of the same plot. Other readers might conceive of the series differently. What is "canon" can vary from person to person.

Otherwise you run the risk of allowing something written in a sequel (or encyclopedia) to ruin a book you love. If the author starts writing things that just don't feel true to you in sequels, it is better to just ignore the sequels, rather than let the sequels diminish the value of the original as well, in my view.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
Like Mark Twain. He wrote a series of absolutely awful books starring "Tom Sawyer" and, I think, Huckleberry Finn. They are dreadful - pur pap, and he clearly did it for the money.

We don't take those books into account when talking about the character of Huckleberry Finn.
 
Posted by Qaz (Member # 10298) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Christine:
DUmbledore is not gay. It was not in the books, therefore it isn't true. I don't care what's in Rowling's notes. If it was important, she'd have put it in the books.

That's not to say that Dumbledore being gay would have changed the story or his character. I'm just saying that the book is where the story is -- not the author's notes, speeches, or intentions.

See, that's the really big news. Rowling is a writer and knows full well that fictional characters don't have character traits outside what's written. So when she says Dumbledore is gay, she obviously means he has his own life -- he's real! And therefore so is Hogwarts! Boy, she's going to be in trouble with the magic authority when they read this post!
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
The only problem I have with that is the 'we' because I refuse to make absolute statements about the whole of experienceor understanding of everyone.

"I don't take [that] into consideration for x reason, and I'm certainly not alone" is cool.

"No one should ever take [that] into consideration because x authority says so and they/we know more about this than you do, therefore your opinion is invalid" is kind of creepy and absolutist.

Saying "As far as I'm concerned, this has no place here" is not as sexy as an absolute statement, but an absolute statement-- speaking for everyone without acknowledging reasonable dissent strikes me as irrational.

It's a very common and effective tool in debate, but it is seldom the whole truth.

(My reaction to such statements is almost always to think of exceptions, because that is just the way my brain works. [Smile] I don't really care whether DD even had sexual organs, much less what he might have considered do ing with them, but I am enjoying the conversation.)

What do you think about the Great Expectations example?
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
I have to say, it feels different because while I thoroughly enjoyed Great Expectations, I'm wasn't invested the way I am in the Harry Potter.

What I think of Great Expectations is that the two endings give two different "reads" on the book and are two separate stories the author chose to tell.

Which is true? Neither. It's Dickens' stor(y)(ies) and interesting as a text and as a primary source for Victorian England, but Pip and Miss Havisham are not real and never were.

Harry Potter et. al. are, and that changes things. [Razz]
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
J.K. Rowling had the following to say:
quote:
"I think a child will see a friendship and I think a sensitive adult may well understand that it was an infatuation," she said.
That makes sense to me. [Smile]

I'm still thinking Dumbledore was essentially asexual in that he led his life as if romantic things were not an element. He was so accomplished and so good at everything - I think if it were important to him to have, then he would do something about it. That's true either way - I figured that he was like monk or a nun or pretty anyone who had an all-consuming passion for a subject that took the place of personal relationships.

And surely the infatuation didn't last forever - he's not an idiot. The guy was evil, and Dumbledore might be dazzled for a bit by the glamor but wouldn't give up a whole aspect of himself for someone ultimately unworthy.

[ October 24, 2007, 10:58 AM: Message edited by: Javert Hugo ]
 
Posted by Zhil (Member # 10504) on :
 
quote:
The default position is straight. You don't have to specifically say that someone is straight. You do have to specifically say that someone is gay.
His sexuality doesn't have to be a binary value. Consider quantum mechanics!

IF we assume:
(1) that the truth of anything in a literary work is intrinsically related to the contents of that work (IE If it ain't in the book, it ain't real!!)

(2) that the truth of anything in a literary work is isolated from external interferences (IE the author retroactively defining a character's sexuality)

(3) the possible eigenstates of a character's sexuality is from the 2-value domain {homosexual, heterosexual}

THEN:

Dumbledore's sexual state can only be described as a superposition of those two states!

Both reader interpretation and interference from the author can be considered an observation of the state, at which point the quantum waveform collapses into either one or the other eigenstate. This observation intrinsically changes the meaning of the literary work (IE everyone interprets stories differently!) and therefore are entangled within the story, causing interference! [Big Grin]


It can also be seen statistically:

If we assume that 10% of the human population is homosexual, then Dumbledore, outside of retroactive definition, can be considered to have a 10% chance of being homosexual, 90% chance of being hetrosexual. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Mucus (Member # 9735) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Javert Hugo:
I'm still thinking Dumbledore was essentially asexual ...

Man, the last couple references to "asexual" remind me of:

quote:
Cordelia: She's got the big puppy love! I mean, who wouldn't? You're handsome. And brave and heroic. Mysterious ...emotionally stunted, erratic, prone to turning evil, and let's face it, a eunuch.
Angel: Hey! What -- how can you -- I'm not a eunuch!
Cordelia: Angel, it's just a figure of speech.
Angel: Find a better one!

I can just imagine Dumbledore in the background of the conversation going "Hey?! Gay I can handle, but *asexual*?"
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
Oh, I really liked Cordy and Angel together. They were the most realistic happy adult couple in the Whedonverse, I think. Which is, of course, why they never really got started and didn't last - bad drama. Good couple, though.
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
But with Great Expectations, one was the story the author wanted to tell, and the other was forced on him by his publisher. (I still enjoyedthe original ending I read best, but the his ending seems more real.)

I think emotional investment is the key, here, along with other people's visceral reactions to the gay. Nobody wants to think of the moral compass/grandfatherly figure as a pervert.

So, I kind of agree with Tatiana here. We may be talking about what is and isn't cannon (as if the HP books are some kind of scripture) but what gives rise to the discussion is more visceral.

For eample, everyone thought the lightning bolt scar was in the middle of his forehead until we saw the stuff from the first movie. All the illustrations up to that point had it in the middle, and the books didn't specify. But in making the movie she said it was to the side, and so it was.

There was some mild discussion of this, but nowhere near the Twisty McUnderpants uproar that has come up over this.

Me, I wonder if she woke up one morning and decided to make the internet explode. [Big Grin] (Not really-- like Niel Gaiman said, I think she was just answering a question.)

But I agree with Kat's characterization-- I don't think any of that was a very big deal to Dumbledore, certainly not in teh way he defined himself (which I think Rowling made clear, too).

I think I would really be horrified to live in a world where people defined themselves largely by what they did (or wanted to do) in bed. [Angst]
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
quote:
"I don't take [that] into consideration for x reason, and I'm certainly not alone" is cool.
Absolutely. [Wink]

To me, things are canon if and when I want them to be.

To me:

Lucas' prequels are not canon, and the force has nothing to do with microorganisms.

The Matrix sequels are not canon, and the "organic battery" explanation was incorrect. I don't know if Morpheus was lying or just had a really bad understanding of thermodynamics, because there were never any sequels to explain this critical plot point.

Nothing done by Herbert's son is canon.

The Silmarilion, made out of Tolkien's notes and put together by his son, is canon. So are some of the other books put together by his son.

Even some of Tolkein's letters to friends are canon. There are several contradictory explanations of the origin and nature of orcs. I prefer the one that says that orcs were bred out of elves, but that the big difference is that they have no souls.

---

In general, the more I love and respect the author and their universe, the more I'm likely to accept peripheral things as canon

As for JKR, I respect her as a storyteller and thoroughly enjoyed her series, but I have always found her world inherently silly and somewhat dumb. Which is perfect for children's literature -- it's not a dig. Really! But it also makes her world far less real to me, and makes me less likely to bring outside information into my Harry Potter world.
 
Posted by The Pixiest (Member # 1863) on :
 
mph: And Hicks and Ripley get married and adopt Newt. Newt grows up to kick Alien butt. Alien 3 and 4 never happened.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
What about Predator?
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I don't think Terminator 3 exists.
Since i haven't seen it, it doesn't.
But, in the case of a writer, what they say goes. They write the Gospel of the Story

Unless it's a bit stupid.
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by The Pixiest:
mph: And Hicks and Ripley get married and adopt Newt. Newt grows up to kick Alien butt. Alien 3 and 4 never happened.

Yes. I pretend they are and AU when the hubby watches them.

MPH: It's almost scary to me how much we think alike, sometimes. I don't mean opinionwise, I mean thought-processwise.

O_O
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
In what specific ways, Olivet? I'd be fascinated in hearing. [Smile]
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
Just not very informed my emotion, I think. YOu follow a train of thought very clearly, often devoid of optinion or emotion. Even if your conclusions are informed by emotion, you're very clear that it's a choice. Think first, consider emotion when necessary.

I think it explains why sometimes we upset people when we think we're just coldly stating a fact. For me, it usually happens when I'm trying to be funny- people's emotional reactions to things tend to surprise me, unless I know them well.

Or maybe I'm just in a "think" phase. I've always tested (even professionally) as an INTJ (very high on the N and the T, fairly low on the I and middling on the J). I've been thinking a lot more, lately, about why I am the way I am, is all. Sorry if that's TMI.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
Thank you. [Smile]
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
Freaking androids. I hate them guys.
 
Posted by Mucus (Member # 9735) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Zhil:
Dumbledore's sexual state can only be described as a superposition of those two states!

Oh great, so what. He's a hermaphrodite now?
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
I guess what I meant was also kind of a "does it work?" kind of thing, where one thinks toward a goal, but has no problem throwing out something that doesn't work toward that goal, even if you like it a lot. It's a sort of mental ruthlessness-- something I admire and aspire to.

So, if the goal is enjoying a story, it's easy to exclude what does not make sense (at least in the context of the way you see things) or add things which allow it to make sense (again in personal context). Because we can't accept things that don't make sense to us. (At least that is what they say about INTJs, and I think it's somewhat true of me, anyway. I can't say I've been paying enough attention to know if you do or not. [Big Grin] )

Scott: "I am Bender. Please insert girder."
 
Posted by pooka (Member # 5003) on :
 
I was reading about Dr. Who the other day on wikipedia, and he used to be kind of transcendant-sexual kind of guy, though recent iterations have him kissing and. It's puzzling, because I definitely resist the idea that the pure intellect will be untainted by sex.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
I just wasted ten minutes reading comments on MuggleNet.

Oh my stars. I can't believe most of the commenters had the brainpower to learn how to type. *hugs Hatrack*
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
I like the kissy-face Doctor(s), but ya'll prolly figured that out a while ago...

And yes, Hatrack is a bastion clear expression by comparison to almost anywhere else I've visited. Including mommy forums, populated by mostly well-educated new moms. It's shocking! (Plus, of the Blues Clues boys, who would ever think Joe was cuter than Steve? *small voice* Yes, most of us on mommy forums need to get out more.) [Big Grin]
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I'm rather disappointed by this announcement but not because I'm bothered by a gay Dumbledore per se. You see, I've been mulling over the question "If Rowling were to write (or authorize someone else to write) more stories in the Harry Potter universe, what stories would I like to read." At the top of my list was the story of Grindelwald and Dumbledore.

A story, however, that involves a homoerotic relationship between Dumbledore and Grindelwald is so unlikely to have the mass appeal associated with Harry Potter that Rowling will never do it. It also is unlikely to be a story that would interest me.
 
Posted by Dan_Frank (Member # 8488) on :
 
But she specifically said that it was unrequited. Which means there would be no homoeroticism involved. At most, we might see Dumbledore's admiration for Grindelwald go a bit further than you would have previously expected.

Still sounds like a fun read to me.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
Dumbledore having an unrequited love affair with Grindelwald would change the tenor of the story significantly. As Dagonee noted earlier.

quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
If the suspension of critical judgment is based on Dumbledore's falling for Grindelwald like a ton of bricks, I think it makes the whole recollection less powerful: it transforms a seduction by an appealing but ultimately evil philosophy into romantic desire overriding good sense, reducing a powerful theme of means and ends into an after school special.

Note that this objection is not based solely on D being gay, but on reinterpreting that as the reason for D's flirtation with "for their own good" justifications for totalitarianism.

This is a story about how two extraordinarily talents individuals meet, become fast friends but in the end pursue diametrically opposed paths and ultimately must battle each other. To me that story is far less interesting if there is an unrequited romatic love affair between the two.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I should also add, that I think the homosexual element, even with no eroticism, would make this story considerably out of the current main stream. Part of the lure of Harry Potter lies in the fact that even though he lives in a magical world, much of what he experiences with friends, rivalries, bullies, teenage romance, exams, teachers, etc. is familiar to the average person. Dealing with unrequited homosexual love is not. I suppose that unrequited love is much the same whether you are gay or straight, but I don't see the mainstream relating to that situation the way we related to for example, the conflicts between Harry and Ron.


Plus, if conservative Christians wanted to ban Harry Potter, imagine what they'd do with a story about Dumbledore's unrequired gay love.

That makes it far less likely that the story will be written or published.
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
I think that it probably would have been written with a fairly subtle subtext, that would have had elements that people would have debated whether DD was smitten or merely impressed by the young man.

If she hadn't said, "He's gay" it probably would have been a lovely thing to read. Like maybe if we didn't know from the beginning that Anakin Skywalker became Darth Vader, maybe the prequels could have been better.

The gay thing wouldn't make me less likely to read it. I just finished Lord John and teh Brotherhood of the Blade by Diana Gabaldon (the second in a series of mystery novels in which the title character is gay) and enjoyed it quite a lot.

But I think the outing of DD probably DOES mean that story won't be told (at least not with the subtlty and ambiguity it deserves) and that really does suck out loud.
 
Posted by Juxtapose (Member # 8837) on :
 
quote:
This is a story about how two extraordinarily talents individuals meet, become fast friends but in the end pursue diametrically opposed paths and ultimately must battle each other. To me that story is far less interesting if there is an unrequited romatic love affair between the two.
I don't see why it can't be both.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
I never said it couldn't be both. I said I'd find it far less interesting if it were both.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
But I think the outing of DD probably DOES mean that story won't be told (at least not with the subtlty and ambiguity it deserves) and that really does suck out loud.
I've actually wondered whether Rowling made the statement in order to avoid pressure to write that story. I'm definitely becoming too cynical (is that the right word).
 
Posted by Elizabeth (Member # 5218) on :
 
I have been thinking of another option for Dumbledore.

This option is, simply, infatuation. Infatuation can hit heterosexuals, bisexuals, and homosexuals alike, and it trumps orientation.There are just some individuals who are so personally powerful and alluring that people mistake their infatuation with love.

A person growing up in a homophobic society would assume they were homosexual if they felt and admitted to a same-sex attraction.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:
To me that story is far less interesting if there is an unrequited romantic love affair between the two.
Why?
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
There is not a simple answer to that Tom.

At one level, I suspect such a novel would spend a a certain amount of time with Dumbledore dealing with his own sexuality. I know that dealing with ones own sexuality (either straight or gay) is an important literary theme addressed in many coming of age novels. I've read several books dealing with this theme and some of theme are great. None the less, this is not my one of my favorite themes. Maybe thats because teen angst wasn't particularly interesting to me when I was a teen and is even less now. Possibly its because I had little difficulty coming to grips with my own sexuality. At any rate, while I don't avoid novels that deal with young people confronting their sexuality, I don't seek them out either. Its a subject that isn't personally compelling.

But I also recognize that a novel on the subject could be written in which there was an unrequited love affair between DD and Grindelwald but DD never dealt with his sexuality. Which gets to my real reason for thinking such a novel would be less interesting.

There are a variety of questions that I think a good story about DD and Grindelwald would deal with. Here are some of them.

Why was DD attracted to the Dark Arts and power as a young man?

What was the process by which he transformed into the Dumbledore who we saw in Harry Potter? What inner ethical battles did he fight?

How do two people who are soul mates end up choosing such different life paths?

What inner conflicts did DD and GW face when they fought each other?

In HP, we see a hint that Grindelwald has come to regret his crimes, something Voldemort could not do. Voldemort was a Hero without a hint of redeeming virtue. Perhaps Grindelwald could be a more complex villain, one we could empathize perhaps even like.

I think that a romantic relationship between DD and GW would dilute the answer to all of those. As Dagonee put it, the romantic angle reduces potentially "powerful themes into an after school special".
 
Posted by advice for robots (Member # 2544) on :
 
I don't know if this has already been talked about in this thread, but for me, J.K. Rowling announcing that Dumbledore is/was gay didn't change much for me. I don't recall any times during the books when it would have impacted anything. I don't think I would view Dumbledore much differently knowing he is supposed to be gay and reading the books for the first time. We know so little of his life throughout the series that it doesn't make a difference. He's basically a flat character from a young adult fantasy series. Announcing that "oh yeah, he's gay" doesn't give him much more depth, IMO.
 
Posted by Shanna (Member # 7900) on :
 
I understand the whole "dilution" argument and certainly agreed when I first read it. I felt a certain sadness upon realizing that Dumbledore's past might be less tortured than it appeared on the page. The revelation of his history is probably the most impactful event that I read in the series. I instantly loved idea and was really intrigued that Rowling would take Dumbledore's character into that darker territory. I was always an advocate of the idea that Dumbledore was terribly flawed while my friends and family upheld him as a pristine figure with godly knowledge and foresight.

But the more I think about it, I don't think a relationship, especially an unrequited one cheapens Dumbledore's past. The fact that it was unrequited probably says something about the idea of "attraction." Did Dumbledore fall onto a such path in pursuit of Grindelwald or was he already attracted to these darker ideas and then took to Grindelwald because he seems to embody them? It reminded me of friends who I'v seen fall into heavy drinking and drug use and debauchery. And people around them would blame their new boyfriend or girlfriend and I would think about how these "significant others" weren't the cause, merely the vehicles to the dark desires that these friends already had. I think that's probably how I view the AD/GG relationship now. I think Dumbledore's psyche was already full of these darker thoughts and GG's arrival just became an outlet, a way for him to verbalize and act on his feelings. And at that age, who's to say what kind of unrequited "love" it was. Maybe it was more of an obsession, maybe just a base physical attraction. I just worry about people, in just the fan community in general, chalking up Dumbledore's dark past to "puppy-love."
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
I think the revelation, especially since it wasn't in the books, made it...bad art.

The subtext became text, and instead of an adventure with layers, it became a preachy sermon.

It's like in Buffy the Vampire Slayer seasons four and six: the difference between the elements of witchcraft and vampirism as a stand in for sex and then witchcraft as an actual drug and actual S&M sex standing for sex. It's still a drama, but it's bad speculative fiction.

Harry Potter is wonderful as fantasy and speculative fiction, but it doesn't stand up as a pure drama. Much too preachy.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
quote:
A person growing up in a homophobic society would assume they were homosexual if they felt and admitted to a same-sex attraction.
Isn't that what's happened here? An unrequited crush as a teenager and Dumbledore is being spoken of as if he were actively homosexual all his life?

Getting crushes as a teenager on your friends is a very normal part of adolescent development, and it DOESN'T necessarily mean that someone is gay. This revelation and the reaction to it does more to encourage that attitude than any "homophobic society"'s practices.
 
Posted by The Rabbit (Member # 671) on :
 
quote:
Isn't that what's happened here? An unrequited crush as a teenager and Dumbledore is being spoken of as if he were actively homosexual all his life?
Not fair. What happened here is that Rowling, who created this fictional character, said he was gay. Then she added that he had an unrequited love affair with Grindelwald.

We aren't talking about a real person here who actually had an adolescence development. We are talking about a fictional character who was created by an author. He is what she created him to be, nothing more nothing less.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
He is what she created him to be, nothing more nothing less.
He is whatever the reader imagines him to be, nothing more nothing less. (Of course the reader can choose to allow his or her imagination to be influenced by Rowling's comments.)

Here's an article that explains it well.

quote:
Another awfully good British author, the late Douglas Adams of the successful Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy series, confronted a comparable question a few years back. One of his fans asked about the kind of computer one of his characters used. He replied, in part:

"The book is a work of fiction. It's a sequence of words arranged to unfold a story in a reader's mind. There is no such actual, real person as Arthur Dent. He has no existence outside the sequence of words designed to create an idea of this imaginary person in people's minds. There is no objective real world I am describing, or which I can enter, and pick up his computer, look at it and tell you what model it is, or turn it over and read off its serial number for you. It doesn't exist."

I'd disagree with that a bit. It does exist – in the minds of any reader who wants it to exist.


 
Posted by aspectre (Member # 2222) on :
 
"St. Joseph's pastor, the Rev. Ron Barker, removed the [Harry Potter] books, declaring that the themes of witchcraft and sorcery were inappropriate for a Catholic school."

Odd coincidence in how he allowed children to read those books before Rowling announced that Dumbledore was gay, and banned them afterwards.

Speaking of which, should Rowling have outed Dumbledore when his public(published)behaviour gave no indication of homosexuality?
To me, the situation very much feels like a confidante gossiping about secrets shared by a friend.

[ October 25, 2007, 02:40 PM: Message edited by: aspectre ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Odd coincidence in how he allowed children to read those books before Rowling announced that Dumbledore was gay, and banned them afterwards.
The article is dated today, October, 25.

quote:
But last month, students found that their favorite series had "disapparated" from the school library, after St. Joseph's pastor, the Rev. Ron Barker, removed the books, declaring that the themes of witchcraft and sorcery were inappropriate for a Catholic school.
That means the latest he removed the books was September 30.

JKR made the announcement on October 19, according to CNN.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Clearly he used a time turner to listen to the announcement three weeks ahead of time.
 
Posted by MattP (Member # 10495) on :
 
This is sort of an aside, but does the Catholic church actually have a doctrinal position on witchcraft? That is, do they believe that is such thing as a real witch who can cast spells, summon demons and such?
 
Posted by aspectre (Member # 2222) on :
 
Thanks, Dagonee, that slipped past me. Or rather I scanned/interpreted "last month" as meaning the same as "this past month".
 
Posted by pooka (Member # 5003) on :
 
I asked my kids if they had heard this this morning. In the course of the ensuing conversation, my daughter asked why Dumbledore didn't use a time turner and avoid the fight wherein his sister was killed. I said either he didn't have one, or maybe time turners can't avert death. What do you all think?
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
I'm pretty sure that time turners only give you a window of a few hours. Still, that doesn't explain why they wouldn't use a time turner to avoid almost every other major death mentioned in the series.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Wouldn't that go against the theme of the story?
Death, accepting death, not being a wuss about dying like Voldermort, plus in book three they talkeda bout the importance of not messing around with time.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
In fiction, everyone talks about the importance of not messing around with time. And then they always mess around with time, except when it would make the most sense.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
In fiction, everyone talks about the importance of not messing around with time.
Except Douglas Adams. Nothing dispenses with paradox as effectively as sheer ludicrousness.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Time travel and teleportation are two of the worst things to allow in your universe if you want consistency.

Here's how the last book should have opened.

Ron - "Harry, we need to get you some place."

Harry - "Oh, okay. Well let's just apperate there." *snaps fingers*.

Hermione - "Well, that was easy and completely peril free."

Hedgwig - "Hoot!"

Mad Eye Moody also hoots.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
Star Trek, especially TNG, has that problem in spades. A full third of each episode is wasted explaining why in this unique situation they cannot user their magical technology.
 
Posted by pooka (Member # 5003) on :
 
While Firefly generally drew its drama from setting up situations where someone was going to do something they typically wouldn't. I think it would have eventually gotten old, at which point they could have just had some romantic tension break now and then.
 
Posted by Mucus (Member # 9735) on :
 
This is part of why I liked Babylon 5.
There was exactly *one* time travel event, framed in such a way that it would be very difficult to repeat. However, that one event ended up showing up in three episodes two years apart, and had repercussions years ahead and thousands of years back which remained pretty much consistent.
Given the pressures and time constraints of TV production, I thought that was truly remarkable.
 
Posted by Ron Lambert (Member # 2872) on :
 
The problem with "messing around with time," is that if you can travel into the past and change anything you want, then that makes you able to change everything bad in the universe, so you become morally responsible for anything bad you do not change. Being morally responsbile for everything bad in the universe is too heavy a burden. You would spend all the rest of your life trying to cease being a villain.
 
Posted by Blayne Bradley (Member # 8565) on :
 
unless your The Doctor.
 
Posted by Enigmatic (Member # 7785) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by MrSquicky:
Mad Eye Moody also hoots.

MrSquicky wins the thread.

--Enigmatic
 
Posted by MattP (Member # 10495) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Ron Lambert:
The problem with "messing around with time," is that if you can travel into the past and change anything you want, then that makes you able to change everything bad in the universe, so you become morally responsible for anything bad you do not change. Being morally responsbile for everything bad in the universe is too heavy a burden. You would spend all the rest of your life trying to cease being a villain.

There's all the butterfly effect problems too. Go back and kill Hitler and some other wacko with less ego and greater skills actually pulls off what Hitler failed to accomplish.
 
Posted by Amilia (Member # 8912) on :
 
I read that book.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
Besides, time turners only work if you actually use them, it seems to me. Once a bad thing has happened, you already haven't used the Time Turner to go back and fix it, so you can't use a Time Turner to go back and fix it.

At least that is the vibe I get.
 
Posted by Ron Lambert (Member # 2872) on :
 
Fyfe, the way I look at it, in order to travel back in time, you first have to step outside of time, thus disconnecting you from the cause and effect that used to define your life. So you could kill your grandfather before he sired any children, and it would have no effect on you; you have become your own cause and effect. You could also go out and back in and try to fix something bad as many times as needed. The fact that you hold the Time Turner in your hand is the only cause and effect that matters.

What I like about this theory is that it allows a vast number of time travel stories to be possible. And you don't have to worry about a recursive plot. (I never did like recursive logic; it can be a real pain in C programming.)
 
Posted by Tara (Member # 10030) on :
 
It's amazing (though not surprising) that this thread has 5 pages. If JKR had mentioned Dumbledore's sexuality in the last book, this is how much debate and argument there would have been. Therefore, it's definitely better that she didn't. Too bad we live in a world where the idea of homosexuality makes people so prickly and defensive that we have to concentrate on it for such an incredible amount of time.

Maybe what JKR should have done was to have Rita Skeeter come out with a rumor that Dumbledore had been in love with Grindelwald, so that when she (Rowling) revealed later that it was in fact true, it wouldn't have been so shocking to some people... Though this too probably would have caused undue amounts of argument when readers should instead have been concentrating on Harry's problems.
 
Posted by PSI Teleport (Member # 5545) on :
 
quote:
She added that, in her mind, Dumbledore had an unrequited love affair with Gellert Grindelwald, Voldemort's predecessor who appears in the seventh book.
Is anybody else wondering how exactly a love AFFAIR can be unrequited? I mean, it creates a lot of funny mental images of a voyeur Dumbledore, but I don't think that's what Rowling meant.

Tara: Well, if I'm not mistaken, Skeeter DOES make comments about Dumbledore's "inappropriate" relationship with Harry. Maybe it was a hint.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Rowling has made more recent remarks on the matter (posted down the page over at Mugglenet.com) ...apparently she -does- feel Dumbledore's support of Grindlewald was largely influenced by his unrequited infatuation.

Somehow, that disappoints me.

I find a Dumbledore tempted to do evil "for the greater good" far more interesting than "crushin' like crazy" Albus. [Smile]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:
I find a Dumbledore tempted to do evil "for the greater good" far more interesting than "crushin' like crazy" Albus.
I figure it's six of one, a half-dozen of the other.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
Well, we have the author herself saying (in her view) that it was very much the latter. She goes on to say that children will understand it was just a great friendship, but that she hopes "perceptive" adults will get the infatuation clues.

See, I didn't notice the "crush" clues until she said they were clues. I'm not perceptive! [Frown]
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
You know, this sort of announcement makes me question the politics involved. Perhaps I'm illustrating a bias on my part, but it reminds me somewhat of Ultimate X-Men, where the writers made Colossus homosexual. I wasn't surprised that they included a gay character-statistically speaking, chances are in a very liberal culture (such as a progressive mutant school), at least one member would be openly homosexual. The part that was strange was that it was Colossus. The biggest, strongest, manliest man perhaps aside from Wolverine was made gay.

I couldn't help but wonder if they weren't trying to send a message of some sort (particularly later when one of the only openly religious figures in X-Men to my knowledge, Nightcrawler, was made into a disgusting homophobe).

This revelation by Rowling makes me wonder the same thing, mostly because it's so very abrupt and most particularly not in the story at all. I also question it because, instead of writing it into a later story focused on Dumbledore, she tells us now, outside of her writings entirely.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
"Ultimate" Nightcrawler has never had a religious affiliation revealed...unless Kirkman has changed that in recent issues?

Some of the blame for his "evil" behavior was put on the things Weapon X did to him.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
I was referring to his original background, Puffy, the one where he's a devout Catholic.
 
Posted by rollainm (Member # 8318) on :
 
"The part that was strange was that it was Colossus. The biggest, strongest, manliest man perhaps aside from Wolverine was made gay."

You must not be familiar with the gay bodybuilder stereotype. [Smile]

But seriously, I don't see how this is "strange". Like you said, statistically speaking, certain characterizations are bound to appear eventually.

[ October 29, 2007, 12:07 AM: Message edited by: rollainm ]
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
Kitty will be so disappointed.
 
Posted by Starsnuffer (Member # 8116) on :
 
I haven't read this thread through, so forgive me if i'm repeating.

I feel that this... proclamation, is 1. Insignificant to the story and 2. Just a ploy to sell more books and encourage an eternity of English teachers to egg their students on the easter egg hunt to find allusions to D's homosexuality while they read the Harry Potter books.

My two cents.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Some gay guys are manly, bulky lunky dudes who lift weights and shoot guns.
 
Posted by Puffy Treat (Member # 7210) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
I was referring to his original background, Puffy, the one where he's a devout Catholic.

Well, the Ultimate characters are often divergent from their mainstream counterparts in some fairly radical ways.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
I'm dissapointed to find that Dumbledore was such a fool. Grindlewald is the Hitler of the Harry Potter world.

Lily was perceptive enough to regretfully cut ties with Snape when he was falling into the dark side. Dumbledore apparently had so little of a moral compass that he tossed aside, you know, all ethics and morality out of devotion to an unrequited crush.

His counterpart isn't Snape - it's Bellatrix Lestrange. That's pretty lame. I know that it's supposed to make him human instead of an all good figure, but that's pathetic.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Not really. Who doesn't make mistakes when it comes to charming people? It's not pathetic, it's something almost anyone could do, especially when they are young.
I doubt he's as bad as Bellatrix, at least he realized Grindlewald was bad news and that he didn't really want to be evil and enslave muggles.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
kmboots:

In the Ultimate universe, Kitty is dating Spiderman.

The Ultimate Colossus, Storm, Rogue, Nightcrawler, and Beast have NOTHING at all in common with their normal Marvelverse analogs.
 
Posted by Fyfe (Member # 937) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by katharina:
Dumbledore apparently had so little of a moral compass that he tossed aside, you know, all ethics and morality out of devotion to an unrequited crush.

It's not just the crush, though. It's also that these ideas they're discussing seem like the solution to all his problems. I have to say, it seems really sad to me, because think how happy he must have been: He'd finally met someone who was his intellectual equal, for the first time ever, and it had begun to seem like all the things tying him down could be sorted out.

And I have to say, it was inevitable that he was going to realize what Grindelwald was, because Dumbledore's a good guy and he wasn't going to carry this whole Muggle-crushing thing out to the bitter end. It's just sad that it had to happen the way it did. And I don't think it's fair to compare him unfavorably with Lily, because she stayed friends with Snape for ages after she knew he was getting all wicked. Dumbledore only knew Grindelwald for what, two months?

And mercy, he was only seventeen. He was a kid.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
When asked why Dumbledore didn't seem to have had a love life, Rowling answered that it was because of the "great tragedy" of his life was that he had an unrequited devotion to Grindlewald.

If it was limited to being 17 and young and stupid, that would be both in keeping with the behavior of the other characters and it would make sense. Considering people are still sorting out their sexuality and crushes on friends are very normal at that age, it wouldn't even necessarily mean he was gay.

However, if "Because of an unrequited devotion to Grindlewald" is the answer to the question of why didn't 30-year-old or 50-year-old Dumbledore have a love life, that's where it gets just sad, and not sad in a "great tragedy" way - more like sad in a pathetic way.

I understand how thrilling it can be to meet someone with whom it seems like all your dreams will come true AND they make the sun come out, but when it doesn't work out or ever even get started, healthy people get over it. Eventually.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
I wasn't familiar with that particular stereotype, nope. And to be clear, I'm not suggesting that he was picked to be gay for political reasons. It's just, coupled with some of the other decisions being made by Marvel lately, I wonder.

-----------------

quote:
Lily was perceptive enough to regretfully cut ties with Snape when he was falling into the dark side. Dumbledore apparently had so little of a moral compass that he tossed aside, you know, all ethics and morality out of devotion to an unrequited crush.
I hadn't thought of it that way. That does make things quite irritating. Not least because it means Dumbledore was full of crap when he was telling Harry about his background...and not least because, in all the rampant gossip-mongering Harry went through, no one gave a whiff of this.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
I'm dissapointed to find that Dumbledore was such a fool. Grindlewald is the Hitler of the Harry Potter world.

Lily was perceptive enough to regretfully cut ties with Snape when he was falling into the dark side. Dumbledore apparently had so little of a moral compass that he tossed aside, you know, all ethics and morality out of devotion to an unrequited crush.

Would that really be that surprising? Keep in mind we are talking about a very young, just-out-of-school Dumbledore - not the man he would become many decades later.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
If it was kept to a teenage crush, not really. See my second post on this page, though - as an explanation for why Dumbledore NEVER had a love life, it isn't flattering to him. I'd think the same of anyone who pined for an unrequited teenage two-month crush. Snape's lifelong devotion to Lily is really kind of sad, but at least they were friends from childhood and it was shown to us how much she meant to him, how she was good (worthy), and how Snape was directly responsible for her death. None of the above applies to Grindlewald (except for the death, but that happened after Grindlewald opened concentration camps (!) ), and Dumbledore lived a whole lot longer.

I always figured Dumbledore was above the storm and drang of romantic relations - that's the price of being a great wizard. I am quite dissapointed to discover that he wasn't above it after all - he was just really, really bad at it.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
Sheesh.

Pick a username. Stick with it.

You're confusing the n00bs.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Olivet (Member # 1104) on :
 
I don't think it is that hard to be excited by a charismatic person with radical ideas, especially when you're young and full of yourself, certain you can change the world. But he didn't follow that path blindly, and was eventually the one who stopped him.

I really don't understand why this is a big deal. DD was not what you'd call a venal person, I think, regardless of orientation.

I would be very suspicious of the aged wisdom of anyone who had never made a mistake.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
quote:
I don't think it is that hard to be excited by a charismatic person with radical ideas, especially when you're young and full of yourself, certain you can change the world. But he didn't follow that path blindly, and was eventually the one who stopped him.

I really don't understand why this is a big deal. DD was not what you'd call a venal person, I think, regardless of orientation.

I would be very suspicious of the aged wisdom of anyone who had never made a mistake.

Really? Granted I haven't read it in awhile, but as I recall Dumbledore did follow that path quite blindly for quite awhile. It was only upon his sister's death that he finally wised up. And even then, when he stopped him, he waited a long time. Presumably lots of deaths can be laid at Dumbledore's doorstep.

But the thing that is irksome to me is that we already knew all of that, and that Dumbledore had very human and plausible explanations for it. Then, after the story is over, after he and Harry had a heart-to-heart in the train station of the afterlife, we find out that their heart-to-heart really wasn't, and that Dumbledore's talk of high misguided ideals was just a mask for a teenage crush.

Or if it wasn't, why keep it secret? Especially, y'know, in the afterlife?
 
Posted by kmbboots (Member # 8576) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Scott R:
kmboots:

In the Ultimate universe, Kitty is dating Spiderman.

The Ultimate Colossus, Storm, Rogue, Nightcrawler, and Beast have NOTHING at all in common with their normal Marvelverse analogs.

I am old. I stopped reading and collectiong them back when they were barely uncanny.
 
Posted by Scott R (Member # 567) on :
 
Oh. Well. Slim is now called Scott. For starters.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Woah - I have no idea why my username changed there. This was all on the same computer.

ETA: It changed again! I have no idea why!
 
Posted by Noemon (Member # 1115) on :
 
quote:
Woah - I have no idea why my username changed there. This was all on the same computer.

ETA: It changed again! I have no idea why!

Did you stop putting out a saucer of milk for the brownies? Because something's got them riled.
 
Posted by Javert Hugo (Member # 3980) on :
 
*laugh* I don't know what happened, but I logged out and logged back in and everything seems to be back to normal.
 
Posted by aspectre (Member # 2222) on :
 
"I'm dissapointed to find that Dumbledore was such a fool. Grindlewald is the Hitler of the Harry Potter world."

So? Hitler was so beloved by so many on this world that the French had to be overrun, the Brits had to be bombed&blockaded into poverty, and the Americans had to be attacked by (Hitler's ally) Japan and have Germany declare war on the US before Hitler became unpopular with the majority.
Heck, the senior Bush borrowed "NewWorldOrder" from the dude.
 
Posted by pooka (Member # 5003) on :
 
Maybe the way things turned out was the result of a massive time turner event from the future in which Dumbledore and Grindewald were successful. And Dumbledore's sister is, like, Joan Collins.
 


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