My post for The Harry Potter Alliance’s What Would Dumbledore Do Campaign:
Save the Malfoys, Save the World
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Smart Talk on Harry Potter
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My post for The Harry Potter Alliance’s What Would Dumbledore Do Campaign:
Save the Malfoys, Save the World
{ 19 comments }
After two chapters outside of Harry’s perspective, we’re ready to get back inside Harry’s head again. But Rowling doesn’t put us right there. She smoothly transitions us back into Harry’s head. “Harry Potter was snoring.” And while our hero saws logs, we get a bird’s-eye view of newspaper clippings around the room. As always, the perspective is not omniscient; it’s a camera panning the bedroom, reading only as much as is viewable to the eye. We get glimpses of the Wizarding World’s reaction to Voldemort’s return, including reports from The Daily Prophet and the Ministry-issued pamphlet with tips for protection. [click to continue…]
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by Dave,
I give a presentation at the College English Association in a couple of weeks discussing storytelling in relationship to videogames. In all my reading for this, one book I’m focusing on is by Marie-Laure Ryan, titled Narrative as Virtual Reality. In one part of her book, she begins discussing how immersive a book can be, writing about certain authors’ abilities to conjure vivid details. Yet, the hook for readers isn’t always an ability to reconstruct the precise mental image the book is describing, but our ability to assimilate the information and attach it to something more vivid from our past experiences. She calls the end result “spatial immersion”:
Spatial immersion is the result of a “madeleine effect” that depends more on the coincidental resonance of a text with the reader’s personal memories than on generalizable textual properties. Just as the taste and smell of a piece of madeleine dipped into a cup of tea took Marcel Proust back to the village of his childhood, a single word, a name, or an image is often all the reader needs to be transported into a cherished landscape — or into an initially hated one that grew close to the heart with the passing of time. [...] In the most complete forms of spatial immersion, the reader’s private landscapes blend with the textual geography. (121-22)
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