Ephraem wrote:The fact that a tale contains lessons in morality does not excuse or somehow nullify the effect of the context they're found in.
Thinking about this, I was initially inclined to agree, with qualifications. But I find that I must disagree. The problem is that a story cannot in general be taken apart this way. To do so is to enter into the specificities of interpretation, and at that point one must talk as much about the reader as about the text.
Now, I know some people who dislike HP intensely-- because of what are patently faults in the way they read it. One of the rules of fantasy is that the author is more visibly taking control of the rules of the universe, and while there are limits to how much things can be changed (suspension of disbelief and all that) by and large the reader has to grant the writer the system that is outlined. I know people who can't accept this. Rowling writes in the third person from Harry's view, and he goes from a position of utter ignorance to a gradual learning of how things work. Some people cannot accept this because it means that a lot of magic happens in the early books without any explanation of how it works.
We all know how impressionable young minds are (yes) and HP is doing quite well in establishing in the unprotected minds an attitude towards magick, spells, occult schools, and the such, where these are considered cool, fun, profitable, acceptable.
Here again I must disagree. If HP is making an impression, it is surely true that this impression varies hugely. And it's also true that forbidding something also makes an impression, and that forbidding something that is tried anyway and is "found" to be harmless makes another impression: it discredits those who do the forbidding.
For example:
Magic is clearly demonic, so why make it seem okay? Why support a work that is spiritually endangering?
A reader of the books can see that within the context of the story magic is not demonic-- in fact, so far I recall no demons at all. (While I'm at it, it should be noted that the third and fifth books devote quite a bit of space to ridiculing occultic divination.)
I don't know that what modern occultists do is demonic either. Actually, I would say that in my experience it is a load of hooey and that the spirits do not come when they are called. It is to be avoided. But any vaguely cogent reader can tell that the magic in HP-- or that in Tolkien, or in any number of books-- has nothing to do with the occult. It is fatally damaging to the authority of a parent to engage in this sort of misrepresentation of works of fantasy, because almost all children are smart enough to catch on that the parent's discernment is poor.
One of the reasons that fantasy is used as a vehicle for tales of morality is that it helps to isolate what is morally real about the story. In a sense, it is a means of intellectual abstraction, because it pulls the principles of moral conflict outside of one's preconceptions.
Certainly, this can be done with fiction without resorting the fantasy.
Early on I made the point that all literature is fantasy. Let me give an object example: The Bridge of San Luis Rey. For those of you who haven't read it, a synopsis is sufficient: a rope bridge collapses, killing a number of people. A monk is curious as to why these people were killed and investigates their lives. Now, I have yet to come upon a theologian who thinks that the theology suggested in this book is any good at all. And perhaps, for some people, it is thus dangerous.
But it's more dangerous to be casting about advice about books one cannot read. That seems to be the case with you and HP. What you claim about magic in the real world isn't true about magic as it functions in the books. Insofar as you state that they are the same, you are stating a falsehood. If you've read the books, then, well, you are merely the victim of your own misunderstanding. If you haven't, then you are bearing false witness.
The issue of moral reality here doesn't have much to do with the fantastic setting of the story
What makes you think the kids can separate the two?
Because I have children, and they've read all the books (as have I), and I see that they do. The person who is failing to make the separation is you.