Richard Cribb
He does monologues
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2003
- Messages
- 4,291
YES!! Another Harry Potter bashing thread!
Funnily enough, Rowling has also been accused to plagiarize Diana Wynne Jones:
And the contest for Upper Class Twit of the Year is just getting tougher and tougher for every other thread...
It is people like him that makes me realize that the suggestion of obligatory shop classes in high schools is a wise one.

You are free to rant more when it is of this quality, my friend!Rambuchan said:Quidditch? This is the least of the HP franchise's faults!
Firstly, let me say that I have read the first one since my last rant on the subject here in OT.
Secondly...Bravo, bravo, bravo.![]()
The plain truth about Harry Potter is (and yes, I'm repeating myself from earlier in the year):
- It's poor literature. Doesn't matter that it is for kids, they deserve intelligent, profound, well constructed writing also. (See Kipling's 'The Jungle Book', Roald Dahl's books and next point).
- It's a gross rip off of a classic children's novel called "The Wizard of Earthsea" by Ursula Leguin.If you have ever read this book by Leguin you will be very hard pushed to find any respect for J.K.Rowling. In fact I challenge any big HP fan to read this book and maintain their love of the series.Spoiler Synopsis of The Wizard of Earthsea :The hero, Ged, born with the name Duny, learns magic tricks from his aunt, the town witch, who sees in him the possibility of great power. When his home island of Gont is attacked by the vicious Kargs, Duny casts a simple fog spell which enshrouds the village, hiding the villagers from the enemies and saving the village from certain massacre. Word of this deed spreads to Ogion, the great mage of Re Albi. Ogion comes to Duny's village, gives Duny his "true" name -- Ged, and takes Ged to be his "prentice." Ged, called Sparrowhawk, learns much about magic, but he wants to learn more -- the fun stuff! Ogion allows his prentice to choose between staying at Re Albi or journeying to the isle of Roke. Ged opts for the opportunity of the Isle of Mages and goes to Roke with a message from Ogion dubbing Ged "one who will be greatest of the wizards of Gont" (p. 36).
Ged learns much and proves to have great power. As all of the students do, Ged travels to the Master Namer where he lives for a year learning the names of everything. Though bored, Ged knows the importance of learning the names, the true names of everything. For when one has knowledge of the true name, the name of making of a person or an object, he has power over it.
After Ged returns to the Great House, he challenges his arch-rival Jasper to a forbidden and ill-advised duel of magery. Ged knows he should not invoke this battle of power, but pride overwhelms reason. Ged uses his power, which he has not learned to control, to call a spirit from the dead. He succeeds in this evil spellweaving, but along with the spirit comes a black mass which attacks Ged, scarring him for life. Ged hovers between life and death while the nameless evil shadow roams Earthsea. Ged finally recovers and receives his yew staff, embodying his achievement of magehood.
The mage Sparrowhawk is sent to Low Torning to prepare for the imminent coming of the brood of dragons newly spawned. Ged becomes friends with a boat-maker named Pechvarry. Pechvarry's son grows ill, and the boy's parents beseech Ged to save the youngster's life. The boy is dying. Ged chases the boy's fleeing spirit into the Land of the Dead. He cannot save the boy. Turning to leave the dark place, Ged encounters the evil shadow that he loosed. It stands on the side of the living while Ged is on the side of the dead. Using his power, Ged is able to return to the land of the living; however, seeing his nemesis, Ged realizes that the shadow means to take over his body and his power.
He knows he cannot stay, but, before leaving, he feels he must fulfill his duty of ridding the island of the threat of dragons. Ged sails to the island of Pendor, kills some of the dragons, and bargains with the old dragon. Ged guesses the name of the old dragon and thus has power over him. Under duress the dragon agrees that he and his brood will not attack the islands to the east. This done, Ged, now a dragonlord because he has spoken with dragons, begins his journey to escape the un-named terror of the shadow. After many narrow escapes, Ged flees wearily to Ogion, his mentor on Gont. Ogion advises Ged to turn the tables on the shadow: he must be the hunter, not the hunted. Ged and Vetch, an old friend from Roke, sail to find the shadow. Ged, who has realized the responsibility he has acquired by loosing the evil, "It is my creature" (p. 160), finds it; and able to name it with his own name, Ged, comes to terms with it -- with himself. For the shadow was merely him, his own dark side. This journey was necessary because without it he was incomplete. Without his shadow, he lacked the Balance, the Equilibrium. He was not whole.
This first book of the series exemplifies the beliefs of the Taoist philosophy around which Earthsea revolves. At the end of the novel, Ged embodies the Taoist way. The first principle of the Tao Te Ching is the theory of inactivity which means that people should only act when necessary. Ged learns through his mistakes and the teachings of the Masters that magic should not be used for fun. It serves a purpose and should only be used when it is needed, not because someone wants to see a trick. Ged did not learn this lesson from his master Ogion, who rarely used his magic. Instead of realizing that Ogion was concerned about the Balance, the Equilibrium, Ged found himself irritated that Ogion would let it rain on them rather than turning the storm aside (p. 18). The second principle, the relativity of opposites, is the basis of the stability of Earthsea. In Taoist thought this principle, that opposites are dependent upon each other (light and dark, good and evil) is symbolized by yin and yang, the circle containing black and white swirls which originate from each other and then end in each other. This is the Equilibrium that Ogion as well as the Masters of Roke try to teach Ged. The Master Hand explains the concept of balance: "To light a candle is to cast a shadow..." (p. 44).
By the end of the book, Ged has come of age. Through the choices he makes, Ged proves that he is gaining maturity. Twice, individuals give Ged quick-fix solutions to his problem of the shadow. The first time he is tempted with the name of the shadow is when he finds the dragon. Yevaud, the dragon, informs Ged that he will give Ged the name of the shadow if Ged will release him to be free to attack the islands of the east at will. Ged, rather than endanger the inhabitants of those islands, refuses the enticing offer. Another time, the Lady Serret presents him with the opportunity to ask the Stone of Terrenon for the name of the shadow. Once again, Ged declines an opportunity to learn the name of his nemesis, showing that he is becoming more mature.
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/ALAN/spring96/griffin.html
- It's a very shoddy example of how to do pastiche in literature. It's postmodern literature at a particularly low point. She wantonly and gratuitously picks out mythic elements from around the world, particularly Greek mythology, and just slaps it all together to suit as she wishes. Quite out of context and depriving them of meaning (See Cerberus in the dungeons). She does it a way which neither leads the young reader to the original meaning of such creatures, nor does she make them any greater for it. She is not even paying homage to these sources, a common element of pastiche.
- It's introducing kids to the whole 'falling for the hype' experience. This means an encouraged appetite for merchandise, following of the movies according to marketeers wishes and generally consuming physical (not intellectual) objects more. Hoorah for capitalism and youth consumerism!!![]()
I can almost hear the HP rabble crying out now "But they are encouraging kids to read". Great. But what kind of literature??????
Rant over.

Funnily enough, Rowling has also been accused to plagiarize Diana Wynne Jones:
Link to the whole article:http://www.exile.ru/books/review95.htmlMy first impression was that Rowling was a plagiarist, who borrowed almost everything in her fictional world from the work of a much better English children's writer, Diana Wynne Jones. If you haven't read Jones's books, you should. She's been around for a long time, writing very well in a genre which, until Harry came along, got no respect at all. Jones's books mix a magical world with the world of the middle-class English suburbs. This of course is the whole premise of the Potter books. But there are resemblances in the details of plot and character as well. Consider Jones's 1975 novel, Eight Days of Luke. The story here is that a lonely English schoolboy accidentally releases Loki, Norse god of mischief, from eternal torment. The grateful Loki becomes the hero's friend, which is a bit of a mixed blessing, since Loki (one of Jones' most delightful characters) is a wholly amoral pyromaniac who favors radical solutions to banal problems, as when he sets a shopping mall on fire to relieve the hero's boredom.
Eight Days of Luke begins when David, the hero, returns from boarding school. David is an orphan being raised by his Great Aunt and Uncle, who are despicable, whining, begrudging, dimwitted hypocrites. (Like many British women writers, Jones is at her best depicting the everyday horribleness of respectable people.) David's relations ignore him while fawning over their fat, spoiled whingeing son, who bullies David with their full support. This regrettable state of affairs changes, as you might imagine, with the arrival of Loki. At the end of the novel, with David saved by his magical new friend, we learn that his relations have been keeping his inheritance from him and embezzling its income for their own ends. They flee, and David comes into his own.
And now, the plot of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. Harry Potter, an orphan, is being raised by his horrible aunt and uncle, who exemplify suburban stodginess and meanness. They force Harry to live in a closet under the stairs (Rowling tends to overdo things a bit), incessantly scold and belittle him, and fawn on their son, a fat, spoiled, whingeing brat who torments Harry with impunity. Harry's salvation comes when he is taken up by magical friends and summoned to a magical boarding school, learning in the process that his relatives have been keeping his fortune from him.
The Potter books borrow heavily from several Jones novels. Harry Potter acquires a hulking, magical biker bodyguard who bears a troubling resemblance to the Goon in Jones' 1965 novel, Archer's Goon. Harry Potter learns of the powers of dragon's blood as an ingredient in magic potionsas did Cat, the hero of Jones's novel Charmed Life. Like the first Potter novel, Charmed Life (1977) deals with a pubescent orphan's adventures at a magical boarding school.
newfangle said:omfg, what does one expect from a book written by a starving welfare mom. (well, obvious she's a billionaire now because kids are stupid...)

Pontiuth Pilate said:Ah yes, because someone who finds Ayn Rand enjoyable is surely an expert on all things literary![]()
![]()


Well, he has to live up to his status as the Bertie Wooster of the board.Rambuchan said:You did yourself no favours with these remarks newfangle.
It is people like him that makes me realize that the suggestion of obligatory shop classes in high schools is a wise one.