by Ilana Berney
So why should Harry Potter be studied instead of Silas
Marner? In my view it’s a no-brainer. I’d swap in an instant, and not just
because I’m a massive Harry Potter fan. No I actually have quite a few decent
“Englishy” reasons as well, most of which I shall present to you in this
hopefully convincing argument.
Firstly both books have the overriding theme of good
defeating evil. In Harry Potter, Harry defeats Voldemort and in Silas Marner,
Silas also defeats evil; it just isn’t in the form of a single character,
instead in the form of a whole village, Lantern Yard, which starts off most of
Silas’ problems and leads to him becoming the social outcast who is presented
through most of the book.
Harry Potter has the main character suffering for quite a
long period of time, similar to Silas’ suffering. In Harry Potter, he loses
both his parents at one year old and then spends the next ten years of his life
with his aunt and uncle who despise him. In Silas Marner, Silas loses
everything he has including his would-be family when his best friend betrays
him and he has to leave the only home he has known. The betrayal of a supposed
best friend is also displayed in Harry Potter and is how his parents come to be
killed, again starting off his years of suffering the same as in Silas Marner.
Although both characters suffer tragedy and become social
outcasts (Harry bullied at school and hated buy family, Silas a weaver who isn’t
part of community), they both also find hope and something much better than
what they previously enjoyed or had. Silas loses his gold but then discovers
Eppie and becomes part of community again and Harry discovers friends and a new
community/family at Hogwarts.
Harry Potter also has the same theme of the corrupt upper
class as Silas Marner. In Harry Potter the Malfoys are presented as rich but
are also unlikeable and often cruel to the ‘lower’ class witches/wizards. Harry
Potter also has the key feature of the less well-off being the true community
leaders, in this case the Weasleys who take Harry in and are key members in
the defeat of Voldemort. In Silas Marner it is the inn keeper and Dolly
Winthrop who look after Silas and bring him back to the community.
And, finally, people have already read the book. Or seen
the film. And enjoyed it (at least I’ve never met anyone who hasn’t…). I mean
that saves at least one lesson as the plot doesn’t have to be explained or the
characters introduced….Also after six months of studying Silas Marner it’s
boring, but I have the feeling that if we spent six months studying Harry
Potter… most people wouldn’t be bored.
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