I’m not asking if there are any black witches & wizards in the PotterVerse. As I understand it there are wizarding academies in many countries, and I’m sure a dark complexioned person or four showed up in Goblet of Fire.
I am also not accusing J. K. Rowling of racism in her writing. I’m just wondering.
Anyway: in Rowling’s novels, are any Hogwarts students (or for that matter faculty) specifically mentioned as being black?
Lee Jordon, who gives the play-by-play for Quidditch games, and as a conspirator with the Wesley twins. He’s described as a black boy with dreadlocks in Order of the Phoenix.
There are at least two black students in the films: Dean Thomas and Angelina Johnson. I’m almost sure they were both described as such in the books. Someone else can probably confirm or deny.
For the record, I’m not all that interested in the movies. I don’t have time to watch all the movies I’d like to so I’ve crossed the HP series off my list to ever bother with. I don’t mean I have anything AGAINST THEM, of course; it’s not like we’re talking about the Hobbit movies or the new Trek, both of which I have preemptively decided to hold in contempt to save time.
The whole mudblood thing the Potter books has racist undertones. Does Voldemort or … um–okay, I don’t remember the name of the character I’m trying to think of–ever express any bigotry toward non-white wizards? It would seem out of place from what I recall of the first book, but I’ve been wrong before.
In the Potterverse it’s someone who wasn’t a full-blooded wizard, like Hermione, since she didn’t come from a wizarding family at all, or someone who had a wizard and a non-wizard parent.
I do think Rowling should have come up with a better term for it, but I never got the impression it was based on race.
Kingsley Shacklebolt, a member of the Order of the Phoenix was a former Hogwarts student, and is pure-blood wizard who is black (and seems to be actually African, or at least have direct African heritage). Furthermore (I had not remembered this from the books) according to the Potter Wiki he became Minister of Magic after Voldemort’s defeat.
Speak not to me of the sons of Ixion. Buncha drunken rapists ninnyhammers, the lot of them. As Deianira if you don’t believe me. Rhymer Enterprises policy is to hobble them on sight and then release the drop them in the nearest shark tank/live volcano/Sears Roebuck.
The above does not apply to Chiron, of course. Though he was kinda freaking looking. Anyway, dude’s dead now, though I never understood why Prometheus needed his immortality anyway.
What were we talking about again?
And I’ve often wondered about the look on Philyra’s face during
The “mudblood” thing is clearly intended as an analogue of racism in the wizarding world, and it it is made clear that caring whether someone is “pure blood” or not bad thing. Voldemort and his followers care, and all the “good” characters do not. Indeed, cleansing the wizarding world of mudbloods (or at the least, reducing them to a clearly inferior status) and asserting the rule of pure-blood wizards over muggles seems to be the principal motivation of the Death Eater movement. Thus, in a way the central conflict of the whole story is a fight against a kind of (or an allegory of) racism.
In a way, the whole story is an anti-racist tract.
Yes, I konw. I phrased it the way I did because I was not sure whether, as Indian, they met Skald’s criteria.
As I said, it is not an undertone, it is clearly a deliberate allegory of racism. I do not recall Voldemort (or anybody) caring a whit about anyone’s actual race however (although I also do not recall any non-white Death Eaters). There does not seem to be any any actual racism in the wizarding world. Harry and Ron date the Patil sisters and Harry dates Cho Chang without anyone, even any Slytherins, seeming to raise an eyebrow.