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Absolutely. Legolas Send a noteboard - 02/02/2014 08:45:15 PM

View original postThat sort of thing is quite foreign to most Americans, due to our traditional geo-social mobility.

It's not today's Britain, either. Wizard Britain seems to be an archconservative British middle class society in some undefined decade gone by (the official timeline places the entirety of the story in the 1990s with the climax in 1997, if I recall correctly, but if you leave out some elements here and there, earlier dates would make more sense on the whole). Which is funny, because Rowling is clearly far from conservative politically, and I strongly doubt she set out intentionally to create such a conservative society without any real internal pressure for progressive change (as politics go, the series is really just conservative against aggressively reactionary, or fascism if you will), it just seems to have kind of worked out that way.

While we're on politics and Harry Potter, did anyone catch the hilarious exchange between the Chinese and Japanese ambassadors to the UK? I guess the Chinese ambassador felt using Harry Potter references in his indignation about Japan would resonate with the British audience and make him seem hip and modern.

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JK Rowling says she got Harry Potter romance wrong. - 02/02/2014 06:32:53 PM 914 Views
I think having schooldays romances continue into adulthood to be rather odd - 02/02/2014 06:45:38 PM 498 Views
yessss. this. *NM* - 02/02/2014 07:35:46 PM 266 Views
It fits in well in Rowling's universe in a way, though... - 02/02/2014 08:08:44 PM 514 Views
Sounds like an extension of English classism, to be honest - 02/02/2014 08:21:48 PM 683 Views
Absolutely. - 02/02/2014 08:45:15 PM 777 Views
thinking on it further... - 03/02/2014 11:49:46 PM 563 Views

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