pauraque_bk: (harry potter)
[personal profile] pauraque_bk
[livejournal.com profile] eponis asked a good question the other day: Didn't Fred and George ever wonder why this bloke named Pettigrew was always shown on the map in Ron's dorm?




[livejournal.com profile] scarah2 has a post on the perennially popular topic of whether particular characters may be gay in JKR's mind, regardless of whether she'll ever tell us so.

This put me in mind of a discussion [livejournal.com profile] keladryb and I recently had on the subject, more focused on whether JKR can/would explicitly state that a character is gay in the books. I'm not sure what purpose it would serve, beyond diversity for the sake of it. Remus is already figuratively queer, so it would seem a bit odd to make him literally queer as well, wouldn't it?

We agreed that JKR can write whatever she wants; no one could possibly stop her. We also discussed the precedent of gay characters in children's/young adult literature. Kel brought up Annie On My Mind, one of the very first YA novels about gay characters.

I've read Annie On My Mind, and it was pretty frank for the age-bracket it was aimed at. With that as a standard of what's acceptable, allowing Remus Lupin to be gay as a small part of an epic series seems like something that should be taken in stride.

Yet, it doesn't feel like it would be taken that way, at least not to me. We talked about the fact that Annie On My Mind is not just a novel with gay characters, it's a gay novel. You'd know that as soon as you read the back cover. It's in its right place on the Gay Interest shelf, where it's easy to avoid if you don't like it.

But mentioning at this point in the HP series that Remus is gay -- that's quite different. It tells us that he's a human being first, a teacher, a wizard, an expert on dark creatures, a person who makes mistakes -- all these things first, and then he also happens to be gay. It tells us that being gay isn't the end-all-be-all of someone's personality and life experience. It tells us that there isn't a great divide in the world with all the gay people conveniently Over There on their proper shelf where you don't have to see them (separate but equal).

And that's what I think would cause the controversy if JKR did decide to tell us Remus is queer. Even if it was only a passing, minor point -- perhaps especially if it was a minor point -- the message that being gay simply isn't anything to get worked up about is something I think a lot of people would have a huge problem with in a very mainstream YA series.

Any thoughts?




On a totally different note: If you, like so many of us, are possessed by an unexpected love for movie!Remus, go here to add 'lupin's cardigan' to your interest list.

Date: 2004-06-22 01:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lolaraincoat.livejournal.com
There were gay and lesbian characters in Louise Fitzhugh's mainstream YA books too. It's especially true in The Long Secret which had a society pianist in it named Bunny as I recall. Though it has been, oh, 25 years since I looked at it, so who knows. And of course even Fitzhugh's greatest hit, Harriet the Spy, probably sold less than 1/1000 the number of copies of any Potter book. Still, there she was with precisely that subversive idea of gay characters whose lives were not limited to their gayness ... and she was writing in the early 1970s!

Date: 2004-06-22 01:43 pm (UTC)
maidenjedi: (explanations_snoopypez)
From: [personal profile] maidenjedi
I don't think Rowling will "out" Lupin or any other character in the series....not so much for social or sales reasons, but from an allegorical standpoint. Lupin's carrying the burden of most minorities as it is, and while I have my doubts that he's the allegory for "gay" in the series, right now he's probably the best there is. If Rowling's writing an allegory, and I know some doubt that she is and still others quibble over *what kind* of allegory, then it's safer to assume she won't bring up the issue on the page.

She's not really dealing with sexuality, on any level, within the series. Her primary themes have been filial love, loyalty, friendship/brotherhood, etc. She's touched on blossoming attraction at the adolescent stage, but hasn't made it a central point. To bring up the "fact" that Lupin (or Sirius, or Pettigrew, or anyone else) is gay would be purely an afterthought, and it would serve little purpose. I don't think she has *room*, much less interest, in touching on the politics of being a homosexual in the wizarding world.

I think she's more than aware of what's being written in the fanfiction realm, and is happy to leave us to our imaginations in this as well as other points.

Date: 2004-06-22 01:50 pm (UTC)
ext_77607: (anguished)
From: [identity profile] wootsauce.livejournal.com
Gah. This is why I have articulate people like you on my friends list.

I think that nothing-to-get-worked-up-about idea is a really important idea that more people need to use...especially slash writers. Though, glossing over the 'problem' of being gay entirely puts me off as well.

But at the same time, I kind of would rather have subtext, instead of having anything explicitly stated. Sometimes I feel like putting things into words 'ruins' it. Does that make any sense?

Date: 2004-06-22 01:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] threeoranges.livejournal.com
Much as I wish I could say that children's literature should have moved past the era of "coded gayness" by now, I suspect JKR would never explicitly state whether Remus, or any character, was gay or bi. British children's series - C.S. Lewis, Enid Blyton - operate in a nostalgic fug where sexuality is just not mentioned as it destroys the illusion of youth and innocence. Not that it's not there in Blyton's MALORY TOWERS - the butch horse-riding Bill and her pretty femme friend Clarissa are an inseparable couple and even plan to go into business together by the end of the series! - but it has to be described as a "special friendship". Nothing more.

(Kannaophelia has written some brilliant Bill/Clarissa, btw, if you haven't already sampled the delights thereof.)

So, yes, British children's series tend to want to preserve the innocence of its characters: if gayness is mentioned, it's coded so that the reader sees only what s/he is capable of seeing and there's no suggestion that the young and impressionable child has been "corrupted".

As for Peter Pettigrew, maybe the twins thought the possessor of that name was a ickle Gryffindor in Ron's year?

Date: 2004-06-22 03:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] overly-shy.livejournal.com
(drive-by commenter here--I hope you don't mind.)

It's perhaps not all that mainstream, but Diane Duane's YA So You Want to be a Wizard series (I first read them in the early '80s) has a fairly clearly gay couple as secondary characters. They're not explicitly identified as gay, but they're two adult males living together, bantering like a married couple. And when one of the main characters discusses revealing her own identity as a wizard to her parents, one of the men talks about the difficulties of passing vs. coming out of the closet--which is overtly about being a wizard, but can obviously be taken in other ways. (Also, one of her adult series has overtly homosexual and bisexual characters.)

And yeah, nobody in the books gets worked up about it. "Oh, look, these are our friends and neighbors living happily together, and they happen to both be men," appears to be the message. Now, the books are nowhere as visible as the Harry Potter books--I'm sure the controversy would be much greater for the latter.

Date: 2004-06-22 03:29 pm (UTC)
florahart: (Default)
From: [personal profile] florahart
It tells us that he's a human being first, a teacher, a wizard, an expert on dark creatures, a person who makes mistakes -- all these things first, and then he also happens to be gay. It tells us that being gay isn't the end-all-be-all of someone's personality and life experience. It tells us that there isn't a great divide in the world with all the gay people conveniently Over There on their proper shelf where you don't have to see them (separate but equal).

I imagine if she makes someone explicitly gay, it won't be Remus.

For all the reasons you give here, I do wish she would put in a passing reference to someone being gay--someone whose sex life is patently unimportant to Harry, who knows. You know? He goes to McGonagall's office for detention and waits while she smooches Sinistra goodbye or something. You know, he knows, it's not a surprise, he doesn't care, readers aren't supposed to be shocked or alarmed, and the people who are already burning the books because of witchcraft, well, it's not incredibly ikely they're allowing their children to be corrupted by this in the first place, now is it.

This is, incidentally, one of the things I love about Mercedes Lackey's Valdemar books, which people say are bad, and maybe they are, but in her first trilogy the main character isn't gay, but a pair of her friends are and she knows it, supports it, and doesn't care, in the sense of, it's not relevant to the relationship she and her friends have. And in a later trilogy, hell, the main character is gay, and again, it's not all he is. Those books, incidentally, are usually classified as juvie lit.

Date: 2004-06-22 04:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gmth.livejournal.com
Didn't Fred and George ever wonder why this bloke named Pettigrew was always shown on the map in Ron's dorm?

My theory about the map has always been that you need to be looking for certain people, or at least have them in mind, when you are using the map in order for them to show up. Otherwise, everyone in the castle would show up every time Harry used the map, and that's not the case. He looks at the map and sees Snape, Filch, Mrs. Norris, Dumbledore, etc., but not every single student in the school. He sees Moody in Snape's office because he's thinking about Snape and wondering where he is, and so forth. Since everyone thought Pettigrew was dead, there was no reason to ever see him on the map. That's in the book, of course; the movie treated it differently, as you know.

Date: 2004-06-22 04:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tagore.livejournal.com
not sure what purpose it would serve, beyond diversity for the sake of it.

Interesting topic. Do you have similar reservations about the Dean Thomas character being black, and by that I mean do you see some kind of unnecessary tokenism in it? Or maybe I'm reading you wrong.

(please note: I'm not asking this with an accusatory tone - I'm really interested :)

Date: 2004-06-22 04:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thepiratequeen.livejournal.com
[livejournal.com profile] maidenjedi's already said most of what I came here to say so my post is basically "what she said". :)

Seriously though I think subtext exists for an important reason, to put into words that any character in the HP universe was gay from Harry to Dumbledore to Lupin to Draco to Dobby to Ginny seems unnecessary and cause for a violent shift in the tone of the story. I'd admire and applaud her for doing it in some respect b/c if anyone could come close to getting away with, she probably could but as many here have stated the inherent danger in making any of the characters we already know gay or lesbian seems too great a risk.

That whole Harriet the Spy thing has blown my mind. I read that book a million times and never saw a speck of subtext in it. I kinda want to reread it now.

Date: 2004-06-22 07:17 pm (UTC)
ext_7739: (Default)
From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_hannelore/
I think in order for it to be subtext and not something HP-bashers would immediately pick up on, it would have to be something that didn't include a main character.

I don't know why this first springs to mind, but in the comic "For Better or For Worse," when a main character's friend says he's gay, I think the strip did a good job talking about several hard-to-discuss issues while not making it the centerpiece.

Hell, I wouldn't mind if Harry was outed as gay. Almost wish it was.

Date: 2004-06-22 07:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lasultrix.livejournal.com
I don't think it'll be Remus, for reasons stated above. I do think it's quite likely that there'll be a passing reference to a minor character's homosexuality, just a reference, it not being a big deal.

JKR certainly doesn't care about sales revenue by this point, and she'd probably love to stick it to all those crazy American neocons who called the books WITCHCRAFT OMG!

from one who EXPECTED to love Movie!Remus

Date: 2004-06-22 08:13 pm (UTC)
ext_7651: (rainbow nyc)
From: [identity profile] idlerat.livejournal.com
As I said in my long screed about the film, I think it would be entirely in character for JKR as a writer to have Remus be *both* literally and figuratively gay. It's like the way the books are allegory and psychological fiction at the same time. I also think of it as a version of "copia," which was a rhetorical term for something a lot of Renaissance writers liked, which was to be inclusive, to have a bit of everything. Like she likes to have every magical creature you've ever heard of, all mixed together. Like there are 12 kinds of meat at every meal. And that superabundance carries over into her stylistic choices. Sirius' incarceration in Azkaban symbolized his depression, but he was also depressed...

Anyway, I rilly rilly rilly hope she does it. I think it would be mighty excellent, and I love Cuaron for pushing it so hard.

Date: 2004-06-22 08:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pedantic-celia.livejournal.com
I want there to be a gay character in the books. I'm sick of subtext. I'm sick of metaphor. I'm sick of people telling me that my own sexuality is not suitable for children, that gay people ought not to be around children, lest children get any funny ideas. Oh, sure, people say things like "It would be confusing". Yeah, right. Children will be so confused, they might start thinking it's okay. We can't have that, can we. People also say "well, who would let their child read a book that was full of gay stuff?" because all homosexuality is to some of you is a rampant bunch of hornies having a bunch of sex for pornographic purposes. Gay people apparently don't have relationships like straight people do, because heterosexuality is fine and dandy for a kid's book, but homosexuality has to be shrouded in some cheap metaphor, so that the writer can say "Look, I addressed the gay issue too!" without actually adressing any shit, because if anyone complained, she could just say "What are you talking about, it's just a story about a werewolf" and therefore nothing is challenged, no-one has their prejudices addressed and we all go home vaguely dissatisfied. Fun for all the pseudo-liberal family!

I loathe the idea of lycanthropy as a metaphor for homosexuality. I think it's vile. Yes, absolutely, gay people are a danger to children, yes, they have to be prevented from attacking children, yes, they all have a contagious disease FUCK RIGHT OFF. Don't give me any of that "but Remus isn't like that" shit. If he doesn't take his potion, he is. If that's a metaphor for homosexuality, it smacks of "Take this course of pseudo-scientific therapy and learn to control your sinful urges" shit. It works much, much better as a metaphor for a psychotic illness, right up to the prejudices of others. To a fucking T.

The issue of homosexuality seems pathetically easy to address. There's a group that's obsessed with the purity of the magical race. They want only pure-blooded magical people in their world. So they'll certainly be wanting to breed more purebloods, won't they? And do you know who doesn't do much in the way of breeding (traditionally)? Gay people! That's right, the Death Eaters also crack down on "inverts", which is the cue for some gay character to speak out about how worried they are. It's got potential, and I am so revolted by people who think that, in books which supposedly purport to address issues of inequality, that the slashy subtext is more important than showing actual gay characters because, heavens, we like our hot boyz kissing, but we wouldn't let our children hear about that kind of perversion.

Date: 2004-06-22 10:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shagsthedustmop.livejournal.com
Howdy, I wandered in from the Daily Snitch...

Much as I love slashing Remus, Snape, etc. I think I would be happiest if JKR just had one of the kid characters mention in passing in a non-judgmental way a gay relationship between two other students.

Something on the order of Ginny saying that she and Dean were going to do a double date with Seamus and Neville. Not them necessarily, but just some random casual comment that implies that yes, there are gay people at Hogwarts and no, it's not a big deal. Because I too want to see a world where people's sexuality isn't considered a big deal.

Date: 2004-06-22 10:47 pm (UTC)
exbentley: (winona/claire)
From: [personal profile] exbentley
I was talking to my friend the other day, and we're studying the 19th Century and he was saying "I reckon in 100 years time people are going to look back at shows like 'It's All Relative' and 'Miriam' and say things like 'see the way that homosexuals were stereotyped in the media," and I said, "yes, and people will have to study texts with homosexual main characters, who'll be the individual, and they'll have to interpet what made them differ from societal values" and generally we had a big conversation on it, but my point is that in this day and age "the gay issue" is a big issue, though it shouldn't be an issue at all.

I think that I would be surprised to see Lupin as canonically gay (beyond subtext) and I also think it would be a great step towards all sorts of communication if she did it correctly. After all, it'll only be the parents who censor it, not the children.

Harry Potter is, at heart, a series of childrens books (however much extra depth they may display) and while I cannot claim to know JKR's stance on gay marriage but I don't think that she would want to push her political position beyond parallels.

Date: 2004-06-23 03:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] slinkhard.livejournal.com
I have very little opinion on whether or not there will be 'canonically' gay characters in HP.
If there were, though, I would hope Remus wouldn't be the one - the lycanthropy issue clouds it too much.

Didn't Fred and George ever wonder why this bloke named Pettigrew was always shown on the map in Ron's dorm?

Someone made an interesting point somewhere that after Ginny's experience with an object that 'you can't see where it keeps it's brain'; Fred and George were quick to dispose of the map, although not to *their* family members. Which is a rather cynical view of Fred and George, but imho, perfectly in character.

Date: 2004-06-23 07:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ellid.livejournal.com
I believe that Angelina Johnson is also black, as is Lee Jordan. The Patil twins are Indian, Cho Chang is Chinese, and Anthony Goldstein is Jewish. Lord only knows what everyone else is - they're all witches/wizards, and that's all that seems to matter.

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