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Vitamins, Minerals, and Harry Potter
Dr. Dianne
L. Durante
Issue XVI--
July 4, 2003
Americans
have had the book's release date marked on their calendars for
months. It's Amazon's top seller. When it's finally available,
many of us will rush to stores to purchase a copy, then fight over
who gets to read it first … with 10-year-olds. No, it's not
Hillary Clinton's White-House memoirs. The most eagerly
anticipated book in years is the fifth volume in J.K. Rowling's
Harry Potter series.
Why are Rowling's books so beloved by adults as well as
children?
Harry Potter lives in a world where hats and paintings
speak, broomsticks fly and goblins run banks—but these are
non-essential details. The essential element is the inspiring
depiction of a boy's triumphant struggles. The series tells the
story of an eleven-year-old orphan, despised by the relatives he
lives with, who discovers he has a rare talent and works hard to
develop it. In the course of his education he learns to think for
himself, to be honest and to be self-confident. He finds friends
who share his values and he earns the respect of his teachers. He
battles the class bully as well as the most evil wizard on earth,
and we rejoice when, with considerable effort and courage, Harry
prevails.
What is the educational value of this? A child needs to
learn concrete facts, of course, but that is not enough. In order
to organize and utilize such facts, a child urgently needs as a
framework a basic, abstract view of life—and he needs it in the
form, not of an abstruse treatise, but of a concise, easily
graspable presentation.
This is what literature provides. By means of the theme,
plot and characterization—particularly as they involve the
hero—every children's story implicitly addresses such broad
questions as: Is the world fundamentally a benevolent or a
malevolent place? Can one rely on one's own mind or not? Is life
to be eagerly embraced or fearfully skirted? Can the good succeed
or does evil ultimately win?
The Harry Potter series appeals to so many children (and,
adults, too) because the answers it gives to these questions are
overwhelmingly positive. It shows a world in which happiness can
be achieved, villains can be defeated, and the means of success
can be learned. When my seven-year-old races around the dining
room table swathed in an old bathrobe, with a broomstick made of a
mini-blind wand and cardboard, she is not expressing an interest
in witches or the supernatural. Rather, she is trying on the
personality of an independent, courageous, intelligent individual
who conquers evil. She is enthusiastically endorsing a positive
philosophic perspective on herself and on the world.
It is a story's abstract meaning, not its physical
setting, that influences the reader. The Wizard of Oz, for
example, is set in a land inhabited by witches, Munchkins and
talking trees—but it really is about the determination of Dorothy
and her friends to attain difficult goals. Little Lord Fauntleroy
is not a manual for how to inherit an earldom, but a portrayal of
a child whose honesty and integrity see him through adversity.
By contrast, consider the ghoulishly titled Say Cheese and
Die! (from the popular Goosebumps series, by R. L. Stine). Here, a
cursed camera causes death and destruction whenever it snaps a
photo. The main character, who repeatedly capitulates to his
friends' insistence that he use the camera, is cowardly,
panic-stricken and ineffectual. The story ends on a foreboding
note, as the hiding place of the indestructible camera is
discovered by local bullies, who prepare to use the camera again.
This book is appalling not for its supernatural elements
but for its sheer malevolence: the "hero" is powerless,
innocuous-looking objects wreak devastation, evil is invincible. A
child overexposed to the malevolent universe of Goosebumps—or
Beavis and Butthead, or South Park—might well wonder why he should
risk getting out of bed in the morning, never mind why he should
strive to master his schoolwork or to excel in sports.
What crucial need does the Harry Potter series fill? In a
culture where fear and cynicism are too often dominant, it
provides a reminder that life is good—that it is challenging and
full of exciting possibilities. The books are, in short, fuel for
a child's maturing mind. As vitamins and minerals are essential to
a child's healthy physical development, so literature with this
view of the world is essential to a child's healthy mental
development.
That benevolent view is all too rare in modern adult
fiction - hence many parents anticipate the new Harry Potter as
much as their children do. Perhaps I should just buy two copies,
so I don't have to play tug-of-war with my child for it.
Dr. Dianne
Durante is a senior writer for the Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine,
Calif. The Institute (www.aynrand.org/medialink) promotes the
philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged and The
Fountainhead.
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