You really have no idea about stories involving “magic” do you?
Unless there has been some kid that has tried to attempt the Cruciatus curse on the kid next door, don’t come crying to me.
How about when he thinks it’s OK to cause great pain in other ways, because Harry did it?
I don’t wish to compare and contrast HP with King Lear.
Too bad, there’s lots of good Christian undertones in King Lear, loyalty in the face of false accusations, learned humility, forgiveness.
I never said torture is ok, torture is never ok. However that is implying torture in reality. HP is magical, it’s far from reality. Torture involving iraqi’s has a much more real impact to it. Why? Because hello…we are living in 2007 and the Iraq war and news of abu ghraib have been waddling around for 4 years non stop.
Yes, my analogy as more drama, (in the pure sense), because the audience can more directly relate to the action happing, after all, most have experience burns, no one has been pain cursed.
But do the means define the moral act? Not really. In Catholi Moral Theology, the morality of the act is determined by three factors, if any is wrong, the whole act is wrong.
Those factors are: Intent, Circumstance, and Means.
In my analogy, the Intent and Circumstances are indentical, ( Intent is to cause great pain, as part of revenge), Circumstance is a war against a vicious enemy, The only thing that differs is the means, flamethrower vs, pain curse.
Now a flamethrower is more easily visualized, but that is meaningless. Can anyone here say that Rawlings portrayed the curse as being anything less painful, her description of the Harrys was hit with one in Goblet of Fire was pretty vivid.
So we have the exact same moral act portrayed, and that is one of the things that the priest is question is concerned with.
[qutoe]
A book on iraqi torture is most likely to be based on non-fiction, directly non-fictional themes, where the inspiration was reality based. Harry Potter, the central theme is magic. It’s not real. Harry uses the torture curse in a fit of rage, though it’s not ‘Christian’ that he does that, cause Christianity involves not seeking revenge. But at what point in our lives has 99% of the Christian population not done something in revenge?
Yes, humans are failable, as yes, do things rashly. But the important thing to note is that we are to repent and ask forgiveness. Where exactly did Harry repent or feel remorse over his use of torture? Where exactly is Harry’s use condemned by the authority figures ( Dumbledore, McGonnagal?)
That is a requirement if a true CATHOLIC moral lesson is to be taught. And guess what, that’s the purpose of a Catholic school. If there is fiction that teaches the wrong lessons, it doesn’t belong in a school, any more than my 'hypothetical book does.
Additionally, locale does not equal inspiration,
Take a look at how many productions of Shakespear have been set in other times, from the 1999 DVD of “Midsummer Nights Dream” with Kevin Kline and Michelle Phifer to Akira Kurosawa’s excellent ‘RAN’, a retelling of ‘King Lear’ in feudal Japan.
Setting is actually rather unimportant to the story itself.
Lord of the Rings could just have easily be set in modern times, because the story was about hobbits, orcs and wizards, but rather about the small and honest defeating the large and powerful. Frodo could have been a teenager and Sauron could have been Hitler and the real story would have been much the same, (Baggins needing to destroy a radioactive part Hitler needs to build his atomic bomb) but with no magic involved.
A good story is true in any setting, good inspiraiton trancendes locale.
[Your analogy remains horrible.
The only horrible part is the torture, which occurs in both.
. I am beginning to think my earlier post on saying Dumbledore is ok to be gay wasn’t probably such a good idea…
One other thing to be aware of. Dumbledore’s homosexuality did not come out in the books ( a point in Rawlings favor), but how easy is it now for a teen who heard that to now question exactly what the main driver in Dumbledore’s interest in Harry, was in paternal, or something else?
I can bet you there are a lot of teen out there wondering about that right now.
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