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Description:
We're sure if you had to classify the Harry Potter series by genre, your first move would be to call it a Bildungsroman... no? Just us? Well okay, just hear us out for a second.
Transcript
- 00:02
The Harry Potter series falls under a number of different genres. [Harry Potter book]
- 00:06
It’s a school story, as indicated by all the time the characters spend in school…
- 00:11
…it’s fantasy, due to all the magic…
- 00:14
…and… it arguably pioneered the genre of protagonists-with-lightning-bolt-scars-and-abusive-cousins. [Harry Potter casts a spell on a table and it floats into the air]
- 00:21
Granted, it’s a…narrow genre. [Dudley chucks a doughnut at Harry]
Full Transcript
- 00:25
Another genre the series belongs to is that of the Bildungsroman
- 00:29
Those are novels dealing with the protagonist's psychological and moral growth as they progress from youth
- 00:34
to adulthood.
- 00:35
Oof, that’s a mouthful. [Description of Bildungsroman in a mouth]
- 00:37
Both the word and the definition.
- 00:39
Alright so this genre is fiction that focuses on how young people grow up, but with more emphasis
- 00:45
on their psychology than… on how tall they're getting each year. [Girls height is measured]
- 00:49
Since the series starts with Harry as an eleven-year-old kid, and each successive book covers another
- 00:54
year in his life, the series almost can't help but touch on various themes that come [The books in the Harry Potter series appear]
- 00:58
with growing up.
- 00:59
And no, we don't mean outgrowing your old jackets. [Harry's top rips]
- 01:02
Luckily Rowling didn't devote too many pages to that kind of thing.
- 01:05
There's all sorts of pleasant stuff, like learning the value of love, loyalty, and friendship, [Harry's friends by his side]
- 01:10
something Harry learns plenty about due to his relationships with Ron and Hermione.
- 01:14
They also help him learn grittier lessons about courage, perseverance, and overcoming
- 01:19
obstacles.
- 01:20
Though, to be fair, his enemies also help him learn these lessons. [A Dementor puts down a blackboard]
- 01:23
Enemies are good for something, you know.
- 01:25
Although these themes come up as early as the first book, it's only in the third volume,
- 01:30
The Prisoner of Azkaban, where we start to see one of the more complicated of the Bildungsroman [The Prisoner of Azkaban book appears]
- 01:36
That is the tension between the emerging individual and the society in which they find themselves.
- 01:42
Luckily it's not a literal tug of war, because society definitely has the individual outnumbered. [Harry Potter in a tug of war with other characters and he is flung into the air]
- 01:47
In The Prisoner of Azkaban, this tension is brought out by Azkaban itself: the isolated, [Dementors surrounding Azkaban]
- 01:52
foreboding wizard prison guarded by dementors.
- 01:57
When Harry arrived at Hogwarts, the wizarding world seemed like a fantastic place, full [Harry walking through the dining hall]
- 02:01
of clever spells and exquisitely decorated banquets.
- 02:05
But Azkaban's a reminder that this society has a dark side.
- 02:09
Convicted prisoners are kept on this isolated island, guarded by fearsome dementors, and [Prisoner runs away from Dementors]
- 02:14
it's generally expected that the prisoners will go insane within weeks of arriving.
- 02:19
Sounds like an extended stay at a Days Inn.
- 02:21
When Harry learns about Azkaban, he must confront the fact that the evil of the wizarding world [Harry thinking about the Azkaban prison]
- 02:26
isn't just a bunch of angry renegades with vendettas against him.
- 02:30
It's also partly institutionalized within the wizarding world…and he can either accept
- 02:34
this world as it is, or seek to change it.
- 02:38
Admittedly, we’re talking about some pretty heavy stuff, but if Harry Potter only had [Harry debating what to do]
- 02:42
to come to terms with sorting hats and levitating candles, the stories might get boring fast… [Harry falls asleep]
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