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Potter and Hobbits – Racists through and through

Chris Henning, in the Sydney Morning Herald opines that children’s tales such as the Harry Potter series or the Lord of the Rings, are “fundamentally racist,” and appeal to us…

Chris Henning, in the Sydney Morning Herald opines that children’s tales such as the Harry Potter series or the Lord of the Rings, are “fundamentally racist,” and appeal to us on that basis.

Yeah. Of course. It’s obvious now that he mentions it.

The appeal of the Lord of the Rings is fundamentally racist. Middle Earth is inhabited by races of creature deeply marked off from one another by language, physical appearance, and behaviour. It is almost a parody of a Hitlerian vision: orcs are ugly, disgusting, brutal, violent – without exception; elves are a beautiful, lordly, cultured elite; in between are hobbits, short, hairy, ordinary, a bit limited, but lovable and loyal and brave when they have to be.
Individuals within races don’t vary from the pattern. To know one is to know all. The races are either dangerous or they are benign. An orc – any orc – is without question an enemy. A hobbit would never side with an orc.

Okay, let’s consider this.

There’s a certain, shallow accuracy to what Henning writes. We don’t see any orcs turning coat and helping the good guys.

However, the sides are not quite as monolithic as that. There’s conflict in the Shire — with some hobbits siding with Saruman when he shows up there, and others working hand-in-glove with the Ringwraiths. The elves are divided, too — intervene or stay aloof or just high-tail it. The humans are certainly divided amongst different camps.

The “good guys” also fight between themselves. Elves and dwarves have an ancient conflict. Hobbits mistrust humans. Humans mistrust elves. Heck, in The Hobbit, the whole kit-n-kaboodle get into a big battle.

And that’s where this thesis begins to fall apart further. Tolkien’s message, in both The Hobbit (at the Battle of Five Armies) and in LotR is that we of good will must hang together, or else we shall surely hang separately. The Fellowship itself represents an unprecedented alliance of elves and dwarves (who work through their racial differences to become the fastest of friends), along with humans of different factions, and, of course, hobbits. When they work together, they succeed. When they fight amongst themselves, they fail.

Is there some “black and white” thinking in LotR? Well, yes, orcs are evil, and, as “corrupted” elves, that’s all they really can be. You can call that racist if you want, but you might as well call the fixation on Aragorn’s bloodline as being racist, too. It’s a standard element of myth, folks, and perhaps it’s an antequated version of “Us vs. Them,” with the orcs as Them/Outsiders/Enemies, but I don’t know that the LotR would have been any better, or more meaningful, had one of the orcs turned out to be a lover of flowers and elves and trees.

What about Harry?

But … but … Harry and his friends are members of an elite. They are not a race, but their powers are handed down the generations from parents to children. The skills must be inherited before they are developed with teaching at Hogwarts. The reader quickly identifies with this genetic elite, the wizards such as Harry, and despises the talentless, boorish muggles.
How we laugh when the Dursleys get into difficulties! They deserve it. They are, after all, just muggles – hapless, fat, brutal and stupid. They’re all like that. Go on, Harry, hit them again and watch them cry.

Where to begin, where to begin …?

Okay, as a parody of English boarding schools, there’s going to be a certain measure of “eliteness” about the setting. That having been said, everything in the series counters Henning’s thesis. The Dursley’s aren’t despised because they’re magic-less muggles. They’re despised because they are cheap, petty tyrants and spoiled brats, oppressing Harry because he is special.

Indeed, much of the magical behind-the-scenes society seems designed to help protect muggles. Magic is not to be used among them, for example. Muggles, and those wizards who come from “mixed” families, are looked down on — but only by the elitists like Draco Malfoy, who is clearly painted as an undesireable, hateful character.

Without attributing too much profundity to the Potter series, it seems that it’s designed more as a glorification of the Everyman than of the elite. Harry’s just a normal kid, raised amongst muggles. Ron’s family, though magical, is poor, and he has to face that challenge against the rich Malfoys of the world.

Are the wizards of Hogwarts an elite? Well, they certainly have talent and skills — some inherited, some trained. But that’s life. My mother has both talent and skill as a violinist — some native, some trained (and practiced, and practiced, and practiced …). That makes her an “elite” in some way, but a book that glorified the wonders of life at a music academy wouldn’t be accused of racism, would it?

Does holding the idea that some people have special talents in some areas that others do not make one elitist, or racist? I sure hope not.

Harry and the hobbits, with their takeaway racism, offer the same comfort for the whole world: join our tribe, be special with us, despise our subhumans.

I’d say Mr. Henning is trying to read his own political message into these books — and the books belie him at every turn.

(Via Xkot’s Discussion Board)

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7 thoughts on “Potter and Hobbits – Racists through and through”

  1. I’d have to say this man needs two things: 1) less free time 2) more than one subjective view of the world we live in. This is typical extremist lefty view. I said extreme, so don’t bother trying to nail me on that one! I know darn well a lot of the left are fine, fine people who are only looking to right wrongs. But this is the standard fare “mommy look what they did to us” “sensitivity” training that is ripping the carpet of integrity right from under the feet of journalism. No one knows who to trust anymore. Who is being genuinly concerned, and who is vying for more social standing? Are they right? Am I racist? What is us vs. them? All those questions are becoming more and more jaded (thanks to, infact, all of the feel-good propoghandists and their sugar-coated, alt-universe dogma) and the more we “know” from reading, the less we realize when we in fact are being racist or discriminatory.

    The truth is, life *is* “us vs them” in some form or another. It is not nearly a bad thing all the time either. Competition spirs need to better yourself, leading to – hopefully – a better understanding of yourself, as well as competitors. Better understanding of each other leads to more geniune trust, not built on the lie of sensitivity no matter the circumstance.

    In a perfect world, we would understand each other perfectly. This is not and never will be a perfect world. the Sensitivity Police must realize this, and also realize common sense dictactes certain actions in return for certain actions. They must also realizes that catering to every denominator waters a message to nearly nothing. One would hope the message would being to wade it’s way through the bog – dare I say, “quagmire”?

  2. Carey: Hmm… throughout that hateful tirade, you actually managed to not once make any sort of valid point about the work. In fact, the only points that you proved were that you are extremely prejdiced, and that your grasp of the basic points of spelling and grammar isnot the most developed.

  3. I’m not sure if your making fun of someone who said lotr is racist or if yourself are calling lotr racist. I would think the latter and if so, I dont think ‘racist’ is the word you want to use.
    Maybe ‘noticing differences’ is more like it. I think you fail to notice that eveyone has a distinct role in their world called Middle Earth and each race has a purpose, good or evil or something inbetween.
    If these movies are racist, I’d be quite proud to be called a racist. Instead of identifying the ‘white and black’, maybe your liberaltarian views would prefer no classes at all and no labeling, hence we should all be one color of brown with one class. Now that is Hitlitarian and maybe even communist now that I think about it! Hey, we should ALL be the Borge on Star Treck and pull the rug out from the liberal state of mind! Wouldn’t that make them happy or least shut them up?

  4. If I’ve given the impression that I think that LotR is racist, then I need to write a lot less circumspectly. So, let me do so:

    I don’t think LotR is racist. I think folks who think it is a racist fairy tale need to reread it. Several times, if necessary.

    (Yeesh.)

  5. I think Tolkien’s message gets lost in his wonderful ability to develop plot and characters. From my understanding, it’s as you say: a group of strange bedfellows uniting against a common evil, with selflessness being a reoccuring lesson. I also think that the timeframe the story was conceived played a HUGE role in theme: world war two with the allied powers looking to the east to defeat Hitler.

  6. I’ve read his commentary on it not being related to the war as well. I’ve got to think, though, that the circumstances he lived in had to have played a role in forming and leading the story. I think the similarities between lotr and the war are to close to be coincidental.

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