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GF3: Writing By Hand
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Publication Date |
Jun 29, 2019
Episode Duration |
00:04:00

When J.K. Rowling started writing the Harry Potter books in the 1990s, social media had not been invented. No one owned a mobile phone yet, let alone a smart device. And even though most people owned a personal computer or a laptop, receiving a letter written by hand was not as unusual as it is […]

The post lexicon.org/2019/06/29/gf3-writing-by-hand/">GF3: Writing By Hand appeared first on lexicon.org">The Harry Potter Lexicon.

When J.K. Rowling started writing the Harry Potter books in the 1990s, social media had not been invented. No one owned a mobile phone yet, let alone a smart device. And even though most people owned a personal computer or a laptop, receiving a letter written by hand was not as unusual as it is today. In the Harry Potter books, most letters that show up from the magical side of the world are important. They provide Harry with access to the wizarding world or words of comfort and – in this chapter – the invitation to the lexicon.org/event/august-25-1994-final-of-the-422nd-quidditch-world/">Quidditch World Cup. And wizards use ink and lexicon.org/thing/quills/">quills to write them. Where did Rowling get the inspiration from, to include letters written by hand? It was never confirmed, but I have my suspicions. In her twenties, Rowling worked for Amnesty International for a short period of time. In her memorable Harvard Commencement Speech, she talks about the “hastily scribbled letters” and “handwritten eyewitness accounts”. But also about the power of human empathy, about ordinary people who join together “to save people who they do not know and will never meet”. The most impactful method they use? Handwritten letters. As a volunteer at Amnesty International myself, I have heard survivors of brutal prisons talk about how their circumstances improved greatly (up to them being released) due to letters written by volunteers to their government. Russian human rights activists told us that handwritten letters are the most effective, because they convey that people are really putting an effort into them. It takes time to do more than simply sign an on line petition. And when you write a card or a letter to a prisoner of conscience by hand, you convey to them that they are not alone. Over and over again, these brave human rights defenders told us what helps them most, is helping them feel they are not alone. Harry feeling alone is one of the big themes in the Harry Potter books. He is lexicon.org/thing/the-chosen-one/">The Chosen One, and even before he knows it, he feels singled out and alone quite often. Even in lexicon.org/source/the-harry-potter-novels/ps/ps3/">chapter three of the Sorcerer’s Stone, Harry mentions that “No one ever, in his whole life, had written to him. Who would? He had no friends, no other relatives.” This theme of loneliness will come back to haunt Harry numerous times in the series – and in this book, the Goblet of Fire. So notice Harry’s happiness every time he receives handwritten notes. Unless it’s a lexicon.org/thing/howler/">Howler, of course.

When J.K. Rowling started writing the Harry Potter books in the 1990s, social media had not been invented. No one owned a mobile phone yet, let alone a smart device. And even though most people owned a personal computer or a laptop, receiving a letter written by hand was not as unusual as it is today.

In the Harry Potter books, most letters that show up from the magical side of the world are important. They provide Harry with access to the wizarding world or words of comfort and – in this chapter – the invitation to the lexicon.org/event/august-25-1994-final-of-the-422nd-quidditch-world/">Quidditch World Cup. And wizards use ink and lexicon.org/thing/quills/">quills to write them.

Where did Rowling get the inspiration from, to include letters written by hand? It was never confirmed, but I have my suspicions. In her twenties, Rowling worked for Amnesty International for a short period of time. In her memorable Harvard Commencement Speech, she talks about the “hastily scribbled letters” and “handwritten eyewitness accounts”. But also about the power of human empathy, about ordinary people who join together “to save people who they do not know and will never meet”. The most impactful method they use? Handwritten letters.

As a volunteer at Amnesty International myself, I have heard survivors of brutal prisons talk about how their circumstances improved greatly (up to them being released) due to letters written by volunteers to their government. Russian human rights activists told us that handwritten letters are the most effective, because they convey that people are really putting an effort into them. It takes time to do more than simply sign an on line petition. And when you write a card or a letter to a prisoner of conscience by hand, you convey to them that they are not alone. Over and over again, these brave human rights defenders told us what helps them most, is helping them feel they are not alone.

Harry feeling alone is one of the big themes in the Harry Potter books. He is lexicon.org/thing/the-chosen-one/">The Chosen One, and even before he knows it, he feels singled out and alone quite often. Even in lexicon.org/source/the-harry-potter-novels/ps/ps3/">chapter three of the Sorcerer’s Stone, Harry mentions that “No one ever, in his whole life, had written to him. Who would? He had no friends, no other relatives.” This theme of loneliness will come back to haunt Harry numerous times in the series – and in this book, the Goblet of Fire. So notice Harry’s happiness every time he receives handwritten notes. Unless it’s a lexicon.org/thing/howler/">Howler, of course.

The post lexicon.org/2019/06/29/gf3-writing-by-hand/">GF3: Writing By Hand appeared first on lexicon.org">The Harry Potter Lexicon.

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