QUOTE(Alkari @ Apr 14 2008, 01:14 AM)

I agree with you lirene, that the 'loss' of his parents actually incapacitated Neville far more than Harry in many ways.
Harry grew up only knowing that his parents 'had been killed', and even though the Dursleys didn't tell him the truth about how they had been killed, he at least grew up without the physical presence of his parents. And that helped make him strong and self-reliant: he had to cope, and he did. I think that Harry, even holding the Resureection Stone, realised that he couldn't bring his parents back, because that would also require him to bring back other people - Sirius and Remus in particular. And then, when would it end - how many others would he want or need to bring back?
The situation was much worse for Neville, because his parents didn't 'die'. They were there, in that terrible half-minded state, and Neville grew up having to see them like that. In his own way, Neville coped with this, as we saw so beautifully with that gum-wrapper scene in OotP. But I think the worst aspect for Neville's experience was because Grandmother Augusta wasn't able to move on. Because Frank and Alice were still physically alive, she had never been able to fully deal with her grief and anger at their 'deaths', and then let go, allowing them truly to rest in peace. As a result of this, she was unable to see Neville as a person in his own right - Frank and Alice were always 'there', as presences in her life and Neville's. So in her own grief, she constantly held up Frank as an ideal which Neville was supposed to match. And Neville couldn't do this, at least when he was young - sadly, he grew up with a sense that he wasn't good enough, and that he would never be able to match his father. As we saw, he did grow up and far exceeded Frank, IMHO: it's just a tragedy that he had to spend 15 years of his life being compared to an impossible ideal.
What would we learn from looking at Neville and his experience of 'death'? I think that the lesson we see is not so much how to deal with Death, but how important it is for us to see people as individuals, and not set them up as "oh, he's just like his father / mother", etc. The lesson from Augusta and Neville is how important it is to allow people to be themselves: everyone has his/her own talents, and just because they have obtained half their genes from each parent, doesn't mean that they are exactly like that parent. Have expectations of your children by all means - but the expectations should be that they live up to their own potential, and not someone else's. They will often surprise you!
Alkari
I realize it's difficult in some ways to compare what Harry and Neville went through. However, I agree with you Alkari that it might very well have been easier on Harry for the exact reasons you state above. I would like to add, that I am in no way undermining what Harry went through in any way. Harry never knew his parents; he grew up thinking, believing they had died in a car accident. He didn't live through the horror of the experience had it happened say when Harry was older; it would have been something he would have remembered.
However, having said this; I realize that my own theory is off a bit. Harry has flashbacks to green light; a high pitched voice. During his third year in school when he is attacked by Dementors he hears his mother screaming. I can't imagine what Harry must have gone through. He knows his parents are dead; yet he can hear his mother screaming moments before her death. This isn't something Neville had to deal with; or did he? Was Neville there when his parents were being tortured by Bellatrix? Because if he was, this could not have been easy for him either.
Harry also has the very unique connection with Voldemort. Harry; through Voldemort's thoughts actually witnessess the murder of his own parents!
But we see that when these two boys enter Hogwarts, Harry seems the stronger of the two, at least emotionally. Harry has had to fend for himself; while Neville has had to live with his grandmother; but she was overbearing; she had enormous expectations that Neville thought he had to fulfill. It seems she had those expectations in Neville not to put him down, but to keep the memory of Neville's parents alive.
QUOTE(The-T-Dane @ Apr 15 2008, 05:50 PM)

So the way death is dealt with in HP is very illuminating to my daughter and in some sence, liberating, because it gives her the possibility to yet again adress the death/loss-subject with me as well as with friends her own age, who in some cases have had losses themselves, but not having been able to adress the issue before.
The way death is approached by Harry is so heroic - but only in a way that is true to his character - and actually I have heard my daughter and other children seeing some hope and seeing the love his sacrifice represents. So it was not frightening to them at all. I don't think that has to do with maturity, but all to do with the way the adults around children deal with the issues.
But I also cannot see any way to compare Harrys and Nevilles situation - that is so unfair to both characters! Which type of tape measurer can be used here? And yet Harry is wondering himself, whether Neville is not in a worse spot because of the way, their surroundings are treating their losses. JKR - I think - makes us wonder about that unfairness - or?
I appreciate your sharing that, T-Dane. I agree; death is seen as some type of hushed up secret sometimes that people aren't willing to discuss this with anyone else let alone their own children. I like how you describe how death is approached by Harry and how strong he was at such a young age.
However, when I compare Harry and Neville; this comparison is warranted because the fate of their parents affects their lives profoundly. This isn't unfair in any way. However, there is no tape measure; it's how the characters face death in Harry's case, and in Neville's case he is able to shake off his grandmother's overbearing ways; he shakes off being constantly compared to his very successful parents. And he comes into his own; we can see Neville's transition in OOTP during their DA meetings. And let's face it, Neville was amazing in DH when he stood up to Voldemort

!!
QUOTE(Alkari @ Apr 19 2008, 04:48 AM)

Mine was merely a passing remark: I simply found it a touch unrealistic that Harry should emerge from his life at the Dursleys with so few signs of damage. But as I said, that is where Fantasy and Storytelling has to take over from Reality, because without that essential disconnect, we wouldn't have a story at all. And for the sort of journey which JKR is writing about, it is just essential that we understand that the Hero comes from an unhappy and abusive home: he has to start from a low point, and work his way up the mountain, as it were.
Alkari.
Bold mine; I see the point you are bringing up, Alkari. I am going to bring in an argument that has been used in the UT thread. I too was surprised at how well our hero fared after all of those abusive years with the Dursleys. He adapts very well to his life at Hogwarts and flourishes. It seems that this abusive environment has made him much stronger as a character and able to tackle the very difficult task of eventually defeating Voldemort. Just as we were discussing that Hermione grows and matures after Hogwarts; even though we really don't have any canon evidence to support this, I believe Harry does carry around those emotional scars, but again, we aren't privy to them. Who is to say that an adult Harry doesn't carry around his emotional baggage if you will, into his marriage with Ginny?
QUOTE(Alkari @ Apr 19 2008, 05:46 PM)

However, Maime does point out that Death is one factor used by JKR to highlight Harry's isolation from his blood-family. Right from PS/SS we find that the Dursleys have lied to Harry about the deaths of his parents, such a key event in the whole storyline; Harry in turn doesn't mention his own battles with death, as with Quirrelmort and the basilisk; he doesn't mention Cedric or the horrors of that graveyard scene; he certainly doesn't talk about Sirius's death; and of course, he doesn't mention Dumbledore. The physical 'home' that Harry must return to each summer is not an emotional home where he can recover from his experiences, assisted by his family. And because of his experiences with the Dursleys, he doesn't - possibly can't - talk about his feelings after the deaths of Sirius and Dumbledore.
Alkari
You and Maime bring up very interesting points. Death does isolate Harry from his blood family; it's important to the plot that Harry involve and immerse himself into the wizarding world without much thought for the Dursleys. Their abuse allows them to become more background characters. The death of Harry's parents, however, their deaths at first seemingly just a mere fleeting mention becomes a focal point in the story; such a focal point that it follows our hero to the very end of his journey. By having his family including Remus and Sirius, with Harry in the forest via Resurrection Stone, the circle is completed so to speak. Harry is finally able to say goodbye and to hopefully move on. However, those early scars and the neglect Harry suffered at the hands of the Durleys, at least in my opinion persist Re: Harry getting together during holidays with Dudley' however their relationship is still and will probably always remain strained. And notice, Rowling doesn't mention Vernon and Petunia. So, I think the hurt will always be there for Harry.
QUOTE(The-T-Dane @ Apr 20 2008, 12:59 PM)

Another angle (besides my earlier input around suffering) I became occupied with by reading HP is this:
So often in every-day-language are people (and I) saying: I could kill ... - But could we?
As seen described, Malfoy is hesitating in the Astronomy tower (HBP), because there is a big difference between thinking/talking about taking another life and then doing it.
JKR made me reflect, because I have actually thought about having to take a life and how I would react.
Mostly it's when I have been in the situation of considering hard facts, while having to cope with my past and how it is affecting my present life. Sometimes the hate towards another human can evoke the feeling of need to act, but could I? - should I? Is hate enough?
How come that for some people (cultures), the idea of superiority is actually enough to make them convinced they have a right to commit murder? The thought of killing muggles for fun is not far fetched, as history as shown us. How were they able to be THAT superior?
At least it was thought-provoking for me.
You're very right T-Dane; and I have asked myself this question too. The idea of superiority was certainly the case with Voldemort. And of course being evil helped too. It seems that he was purging the wizarding society of those witches and wizards who weren't pure bloods; which is absolutely hypocritical given the fact that Voledmore was a half blood. Rowling has said in several interviews that Voldemort's actions mirror those of Hitler during his heinous rein of power.
I was reading the transcripts from Rowling's very recent trial and she says the following:
QUOTE
Any
18 guide to the Harry Potter books should have a lengthy entry on
19 death. It is probably the major theme of the whole seven book
20 series, and it appears in so many different ways.
21 You can discuss the attitude of the leading characters
22 to death, which is enormously revealing about their psychology.
23 You can talk about the fantastic objects that I created that
24 either attempt to overcome death or are dangerous and may cause
25 fatalities.
I really like what Rowling says above; that death is probably the major theme of the HP books (bold mine). Do you agree with Rowling in this regard?