
Originally Posted by
JBI
No, I get yelled at because I discuss something other than the text's popularity - the actual text - every time Harry Potter comes up, the best excuse for the text's quality seem to come from outside the text itself - when I talk about the faults I find inside the text, ultimately, my judgment is taken out of context, and is used as a judgment on Harry Potter as seen outside of the text - Harry Potter the brand, if you will - I don't judge the book on its popularity - Marquez is one of the most popular living writers, and I would go as far as to say he deserves an even bigger reputation, and to be brought into the classroom more, in areas other than Latin American Studies, or Latin American literature or whatever.
I would rather people disagree with me and actually read my posts, then just agree with them, because they feel they suit the agenda of "Potter sucks" or "Popular Schlock" or whatever, or even worse just dismiss me for insulting the brand that gets kids reading. All my judgments, ultimately, come from a close reading - though, I will profess, a close reading of Dan Brown is one chapter of one book - there is no reason to go any further there.
Seriously, how much is lost because we can only discuss whether the popularity of Potter is justified, or whether its social utility at getting semi-literate lazy kids to pick up a novel is any worth - why not give some evidence of the texts value from within the text, and not within the brand - I wouldn't, for instance, say T. S. Eliot is a good poet because he got people reading, I would say T. S. Eliot is a good poet, because he wrote good poems, and then I would go into them to explain why - how then, can it be justified that Potter's quality is there, without actually looking into the text, and yes, saying they are entertaining is not really saying anything - porn is entertaining, T. V. is entertaining, that doesn't mean I should discuss the latest new video releases.
As for porn disrespecting women, that is a construct of the genre - they easily could portray men as submissive, and woman is dominant, but the argument against that would be that would make less money, and be less entertaining, and isn't what we want entertainment, not some high brow politically correct... you get the point.
Just because the Potter may have gotten some kids interested in literature does not mean it is a good text, or worthy of literary discussion, or time. In the same way, reading Eliot in highschool may detract some people from reading poetry in the future - does that mean that Eliot is a bad poet?
The popularity of the text does not justify the text. You say you learned to love reading reading things most people cannot consider loveable - does that justify those texts as great works? You cannot prove you wouldn't have learned to love reading reading something more worth loving, so really, such anecdotes hold no ground, as they do not say anything about the text, or about what the effect ways.
The truth is, less people are reading now then ever in certain countries. Whether some kids learned to love Harry Potter is irrelavent, as, quite simply, we cannot say that any more or less people would be reading classics with Harry Potter never having been published - the text did reshape children's literature, and I'd say Children's cinema to an extent, by making it a more lucrative industry, so there is that, but does that mean it helped reading? Did Power Rangers, for instance, lead to American children loving television more, or what about The Brady Bunch, or any other such toss. Should we praise and discuss Pokemon for making kids love TV and Videogames more? Those things are, supposedly, entertaining at any rate, why not praise them.