From the Colorado Daily
Missing
from ‘Harry Potter' - a real moral struggle
By JENNY SAWYER
Wednesday, July 25, 2007 7:42 PM MDT
Boston - If literature truly reflects society, then the end of
the Harry Potter series spells trouble for us all.
Because, after 10 years, 4,195 pages, and over 325 million copies, J.K.
Rowling's towering achievement lacks the cornerstone of almost all great
children's literature: the hero's moral journey. Without that foundation, her
story - for all its epic trappings of good versus evil - is stuck in a moral no
man's land.
To be clear: This isn't a critique of Ms. Rowling's values. It's a recognition
of a disturbing trend in commercial storytelling and Western society.
For those who've yet to finish “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” stop
reading now: There are spoilers ahead. If you did, however, embark on a Deathly
Hallows marathon, you know that the shady Severus Snape died, not in the name
of evil, but in the name of good.
Oh, yeah. And Harry defeated Voldemort. Good prevailed. The
problem is, that's not the moral of the story. Good always prevails. It's the
hero's struggle - and costly redemption - that matters.
Classic tales such as J.R.R. Tolkien's “Lord of the Rings” trilogy and
Madeleine L'Engle's “A Wrinkle in Time” set the standard for children's
fiction. With their unrelenting drive toward “the moral of the story,” they
form a golden thread in the West's cultural fabric. And yet, like the society
in which we live, storytelling itself has, in recent decades, undergone a
radical transformation - sliding toward moral ambivalence with alarming speed.
I'm not advocating for the kind of didacticism that dominated Puritan and
Victorian children's fiction. Times change. Arguably, postwar, post-Depression
America needed the escape value of Disney's adaptations of “Snow White” and
“Cinderella.” It was a marriage of storytelling and meaning-making quite apart
from what the Brothers Grimm envisaged a century before. But while Disney's
focus was entertainment, the moral still mattered. And that moral center has
all but vanished from much of today's pop culture.
Successful storytelling rests on a few basic principles. One of them is this: A
story is about someone who changes, who grows through a moral struggle. What is
Harry's struggle? Exactly.
Throughout the series, but especially in book seven, even Harry's darkest
moments - of self-doubt, of disillusionment, of skepticism about his greatest
mentor, Dumbledore - never ring true. Was there any doubt that Harry would
fulfill the task set out for him?
The truth of the matter is that Harry the character had nowhere to go. And
thus, the overarching moral dilemma of the series, the compelling inner crisis
that begged resolution, had nothing to do with our beloved hero.
First principle of storytelling
Back to that first principle of storytelling: A story is about someone who
changes. And, puberty aside, Harry doesn't change much. As envisioned by
Rowling, he walks the path of good so unwaveringly that his final victory over
Voldemort feels, not just inevitable, but hollow.
But there is one character who does face a compelling inner crisis: Snape. With
all the debate - and with all of Rowling's clues - about whether he was good or
bad, it's fair to say that the sallow-faced potions professor has entranced
many readers. His character ached for resolution.
And it is precisely this need for resolution - our desire to know the real
Snape and to understand his choices - that makes him the most compelling
character in the Potter epic. His decisions, not Harry's, were the linchpin.
And his moment with Dumbledore after the death of Harry's parents, not Harry's
last duel with Voldemort, is the authentic climax of the series.
For Harry, there was no choice. The way forward was clear, the conflict - and
journey - external. We cared about Snape because this was not the nature of his
story. Every action was weighted with the pain and subtext of his choices, or
lack thereof. For Snape, there weren't - there couldn't be - any easy answers.
And yet, in the end, his moral journey was overshadowed by this fact: It was
merely one more plot device to propel Harry toward his pre-destined victory.
Snape: the authentic protagonist
Rowling has publicly expressed mystification over her readers' fascination with
Snape, even suggesting that his appeal is simply “the bad boy syndrome.”
Instead, her readers, whether consciously or not, have tapped into something
that Rowling herself may have failed to recognize.
That something was a need for a protagonist who genuinely struggled to define -
and do - the right thing. A passive main character with no authentic moral
dilemma is not only hard to relate to, he or she is also no guide in
circumstances in which right and wrong are anything less than black and white.
In a society increasingly steeped in moral relativism, it's not the Harrys of
the world who will make a difference. It's the Snapes. It's those who need
redemption, then choose it. It's those willing to press on and fail and then to
press on again - especially when there are no clear answers.
There is much to love about the Harry Potter series, from its brilliantly
realized magical world to its multilayered narrative. Unfortunately, Rowling
did her readers a great disservice by making the story about Harry when it
really should have been about Snape.
And yet, it's hard to imagine Snape's story emerging from a society where
entertainment is king - and where the moral of the story is that there's seldom
a moral at all.
Jenny Sawyer is a freelance writer and children's literature critic.