Many scholars recognize the importance of Harry Potter as a vehicle for discussions about society--from race relations and gender studies to economic, political, religious and educational applications of the texts.
This interdisciplinary collection of new essays brings to the forefront a critique of modern Western society, using Harry's world as a mirror to our own. Covering issues surrounding parenting and family relations, social class, life and death, the link between identity and morality and even the risks of time travel, this collection provides many jumping-off points for scholars and nonscholars alike to spark discussions about both Harry's world and our own.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction (Christopher E. Bell)
Gone but Not Forgotten: The Missing Mothers of the Wizarding World
delete delete(Kate Fulton and Alicia L. Skipper)
"Beyond the veil": The Narrative Functions of Death (Samantha J. Vertosick)
"I don't think you're a waste of space": Activity, Redemption and the Social Construction of Fatness (Tolonda Henderson)
Of the Patil Twins (Soma Das)
Time Travel and the Cursed Child (Elizabeth Morrow Clark)
Frisky, Risky Firewhisky: The Rhetorical Function of Alcohol (Lauren Camacci)
Pure-Bloods, Half-Bloods and Mudbloods (Camilla Schroeder)
"You have your mother's eyes": Inheritance and Social Class (Alison Baker)
The First Gift: Owls as Paragons of the Non-Human (Keri Stevenson)
Dangerous Depictions of Adoption in Rowling's Wizarding World Narratives (Tara Moore)
Harry Potter and the Paradoxes of Fidelity (Jelena Borojevi )
What Is a Hero?: An Analysis of Legacy Symbolism (Marley Stuever-Williford)
About the Contributors
Index