“Hermione is not Chosen. That’s the best thing about her. Hermione is a hero because she decides to be a hero; she’s brave, she’s principled, she works hard, and she never apologizes for the fact that her goal is to be very, extremely good at this whole “wizard” deal. Just as Hermione’s origins are nothing special, we’re left with the impression that her much-vaunted intelligence might not be anything special, on its own. But Hermione is never comfortable with relying on her “gifts” to get by. There’s no prophecy assuring her importance; the only way for Hermione to have the life she wants is to work for it. So Hermione Granger, generation-defining role model, works her adorable British ass off for seven straight books in a row. Although she deals with the slings and arrows of any coming-of-age tale — being told that she’s “bossy,” stuck-up, boring, “annoying,” etc — she’s too strong to let that stop her. In Hermione Granger and the Prisoner of Azkaban, she actually masters the forces of space and time just so that she can have more hours in the day to learn.”

Notes

  1. earthenowlish reblogged this from lukescommonplacebook
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  3. swordgirl reblogged this from lauracricket and added:
    In a way, this is what I love about Hermione, but it also would make her really difficult to live with. I mean, I know...
  4. lauracricket reblogged this from lukescommonplacebook
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  8. nik-nat reblogged this from lukescommonplacebook and added:
    My thoughts exactly…
  9. lukescommonplacebook posted this