I think this book is not actually a fairy tale or children's book.
This writing actually has the shadow of class social and cultural conflict in classical literature.
And I think the author's position is to the right.
Personally, I feel that magic and papaya actually correspond to the noble elite and the common people.
Voldemort and Harry are actually a struggle between the extreme right and the left in the aristocracy.
The core of the conflict may not be economic and practical interests, but more cultural values.
In fact, I feel that the magical world is deteriorating.
Not only in the world of papaya, magic has lost its influence.
In the magical world, the problems of popularity and popularization have actually appeared.
A little bit of magic is instrumentalized and entertained.
The goal of the Voldemort Group is actually not just as simple as racism. In fact, the main goal may be a cultural rectification.
But Gong terrorism actually has the intention of establishing cultural authority.
Voldemort's evil is a faithful evil.
Why is the author's position on the right?
In fact, the author supports cultural elitism.
To magic is a stroke of praise.
In fact, the author is actually a mocking attitude towards the secular and popular culture represented by the papaya class.
When writing about Harry's early life, I didn't use Cinderella's story to dislike tears, but
more often it was a criticism of modern popular culture without spiritual beliefs.
In fact, the author also expressed partial understanding and sympathy for the rightists represented by Voldemort.
In fact, writing harry is writing young Voldemort.
But the author does not agree with this extreme.
The subject of the author is love.
Personal understanding is that although ism is important, life and talents are more precious.
In fact, harry potter as a popular work actually has an anti-pop culture core.
In the mainstream cultural world with freedom and equality, the author actually shaped a hierarchical society and told a story about elite culture.
For children who grew up watching advertisements, they saw a world full of imagination.
But I don't know that this story is actually the chant of history by the spiritual aristocrats.
Harry Potter is not a simple story of justice over evil.
Tell the story of the failure of the extreme right, the story will always get the sense of justice that most people agree with.
But this does not mean that the author is leftist, nor does it mean that the author agrees with anti-elite popularism.
The author is not superficial and blind. He actually knows the strengths and weaknesses of the left and right, the elite and the anti-elite, and the various cultural factions in the elite culture.
It is based on this understanding that the characters in harry potter show complex levels.
It is precisely because of the author's subtle attitude that the characters in the book are both good and bad, and bad and good.
Perhaps the author’s highest evaluation is snape.
He is actually a typical rightist who does not approve of extreme means.
In fact, there are rightists in any culture.
The left and the right are actually eternal.
In extreme times, there will always be extreme right forces coming to the fore.
So Voldemort is actually unkillable, and people who believe in culture are the Horcruxes of the right.
Where there is magic, there will be Voldemort.
There is a problem that cannot be circumvented in cultural analysis.
Today, equal justice seems to be widely accepted.
So is class sinful?
This is actually a very dangerous problem.
To be more realistic:
If you think that a person’s class determines everything, then you are sinful.
But if you think that class does not make a difference in people, then you are blind.
The world of harry potter is actually a class world.
The author actually has his own thoughts on this issue.
Class is determined by education.
Equality is not about eliminating the aristocracy and its elite culture.
It is equal to giving everyone the opportunity to become aristocrats through education.
This actually represents an attitude of modern British people towards class.
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