Evidently short of material, today’s New York Times translates a Le Monde op-ed denouncing the Harry Potter books as propaganda for “neoliberalism” (which you know, if you keep track of European leftist bogeymen, is only slightly less fascistic than international jewry neoconservatism). According to a certain Ilias Yocaris, “professor of literary theory and French literature at the University Institute of Teacher Training in Nice”, J. K. Rowling’s wizardly universe celebrates all of the vices of the present day Amerikkka-dominated dystopia:
The underlying message to young fans is this: You can imagine as many fictional worlds, parallel universes or educational systems as you want, they will still all be regulated by the laws of the market. Given the success of the Harry Potter series, several generations of young people will be indelibly marked by this lesson.
It’s instructive to see how outraged a European leftist is by “ritual complaints about the rigidity and incompetence of bureaucrats” and how scornful of the notion of a “fight against Evil”. We aren’t told in so many words that He-who-must-not-be-named is a misunderstood victim of capitalist oppression, rather like poor Saddam Hussein, but the subtext is legible.
Steve Sachs, a graduate student at Merton College, Oxford, traverses M. Yocaris’ effusion line by line and draws out the perverse humor in its ploddingly serious exposition. Definitely worth reading to lighten your day and enhance your contempt for French intellectuals.
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