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Reply to sailorlum about Remus, because the comments were getting tl;dr

The World of Severus Snape

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Reply to sailorlum about Remus, because the comments were getting tl;dr

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I didn't want to take up any more of the thread in terri's post, or make other commentators there uncomfortable, so I've moved my reply here.

ETA to avoid any misunderstanding: THIS IS NOT A STAND-ALONE ESSAY. It is a REPLY to a long discussion on terri's Remus as Parent post. Please, if you think something is missing or unclear, please read back in the discussion to be sure, for the sake of avoiding misunderstandings. Link is

http://asylums.insanejournal.com/snapedom/260607.html?thread=2032639#t2032639

Thank you.

There are a couple of points I want to make, sailorlum. I was trying not to tl;dr but I did it again. Sorry. :( Thank you for not taking my rantiness personally.

The first point that occurs to me reading your response is "how could Remus NOT assume he'd be traumatized to some degree?" Not, let me be clear, that Remus ought to be able to judge the specific degree of it to a millimeter. Just that, knowing the *fact* that Severus had nearly lost his life to a werewolf, Remus could reasonably be expected to assume that maybe Severus might have a less than enthusiastic response to living in the same castle as the werewolf again, and that this would need to be respected and addressed somehow.

And no, Severus wouldn't have cried about it in front of everyone. That's not the point. It's a normal, standard human reaction to deeply impacted by such a near miss, even if you don’t talk about it constantly. So much that we would consider abnormal someone who *wasn't.*

But. People do heal, yes. Usually, after such a near miss, when they have a good deal of support and counseling and time. Which Severus didn't have. But, as you point out, Remus hadn't been in contact with him (as far as we know) for over a decade. He wouldn’t necessarily *know* he still hurts. Ok. Maybe he thought Severus had gotten over it? Let's start over, again assuming the best. Let's assume Remus did not *know* how traumatized Severus really was. I'll do more that take that as my new starting point, I'll grant you without retraction that, up through the end of that scene, it's as possible/valid as the reading that he did *know.* As you say, he hadn't been in contact with Severus in years. So you’ve adjusted my thinking with that.

But. My second point, after having considered how your point affects my previous argument: What did he do, upon returning to Hogwarts and encountering Severus again? Did he (from the indications in the text), in re-establishing his relationship to Severus, attempt to discern how the man really felt, now that he was present? (Regardless of how Severus might have responded, did Remus *try*)? Did he give an indication of considering *the possibility* that Severus, still wary and suspicious of him, might be reacting to the presence of the werewolf who nearly mauled him? That is, did he even once attempt to put himself in Severus' shoes and think about the *possibility* that the man was still suffering?

No. He made *assumptions* about Severus. He *assumed* that Severus either was not traumatized (as a normal person would have been) or that he was over it. There is no sign in the text that he attempted to get confirmation of this fact from Severus, no sign that he ever accorded Severus the human respect of *asking* him how he felt. Even if Severus wouldn't have responded well, that's not the point - Remus had a duty to think of the situation from Severus' POV for a moment rather than make assumptions about the feelings and state of mind of another person regarding a life-threatening incident.

His failure here is exactly the same at base as if he had *known* for certain. He failed to accord Severus the human respect of thinking of him as a separate person who can feel pain, who has his own POV on things, and whose pain *matters.* He failed to consider Severus' possible pain as real or *worthy of thought* - whether he knew for certain that Severus was in pain or whether it was merely possible that he was, based on a normal person's reactions to things. He did not think of the mere possibility that Severus might hurt as something *he needed to investigate,* however minimally. He assumed. And acted, on the basis of that assumption, to deny and invalidate Severus' pain when he was brought face to face with it - regardless of motive or of his conscious awareness that that was what he was doing.

People are often emotionally dumb, as you put it, and far far too often fail in exactly this way. They fail to think of other people as truly, fully *human* beings who feel pain and have their own perspectives. It's a very very common failing, and I do not exclude myself from that. It is also, most of the time, not a particularly conscious failing. That still does not excuse it. It may be human to fail in this way - I'm not saying Remus is the worst person in the world for failing like this. He’s not Voldemort, and he has positive traits. But it is a failing, and I won't let him off the hook for it even when I assume the best motives.

Regarding your argument that he later realized what he'd done and tried to make up for it...well, perhaps it holds in the moment. No longer. It doesn't actually impact his behavior - because he again fails to respect Severus' pain even after this incident. He again makes Severus track him down with the potion at the last minute. And we get words from his own lips, that second evening, that confirm that he *still* does not think Severus' pain (which, in your argument, he was now conscious of) worthy of regard. He is still failing to respect Severus as a human being that evening. Because, having seen that Severus is indeed still traumatized and hurting, he explicitly tells Severus *to his face* that he needs to get over it, that it is just "a schoolboy grudge." Here it's not a question of not realizing Severus was hurt; Remus (now) knows he's hurt. He simply thinks, and says, that Severus has no *right* to be hurt. He trivializes the impact of a life-threatening encounter, to the man's face. Severus' pain *does not matter to him.*

As you say, Remus certainly minimized the Prank in his own mind. That is precisely my point, overall. He minimized another person's life-threatening experience, and in so doing necessarily minimized the meaningfulness of that person’s pain. An action which, conscious and deliberate or not, is a step towards dehumanization. And he continued to do this even after seeing for himself that the person was still hurting. You can argue that, before the tussle over the potion, it was merely a failure to do his human duty and consider things, not a deliberate act. I...don’t entirely agree with that reading, but it’s certainly possible. But after that encounter he ought to have realized and acted, but he did not. And in the Shack, when he explicitly acknowledged and then dismissed Severus’ pain to the man’s face, it utterly ceased to be a passive failure. At that point, if not before, it was willful refusal. A refusal we never see him apologize for, nor recant. - Had he repented and changed, that we could see, I would not come down so hard on him. I would also be more willing to accept arguments that it was unconscious, passive failure most of the time, such as in the first tussle over the potion. The fact that he never significantly alters his attitude or behavior (speech is another thing) that we see inclines me to read it as a consistent aspect of his character, not an unconscious failing he’d likely repent once awoken to it.

See, I understand that you want to give him the benefit of the doubt, that you like him and want a flawed but human Remus. Of course that’s your right. Even more than that, I agree that he *is* flawed but human. He is not Voldemort, and does have good points. He’s willing to risk his life to defeat Voldemort, for one thing. He’s loyal to his friends (for better or worse). For those in his pack, he does care, even if he is not always perfect about fulfilling his responsibilities to them. He wants to make the WW a better place. And he suffers, yes, decidedly, and sometimes beyond anything deserved. But he has his flaws. This is exactly my point. He has flaws, and these are his flaws. He can be insensitive to other people. He has recurring moments of moral cowardice that he repeatedly gives into. And if you aren’t in his pack (like Severus), he can fail to accord you the respect due another human being, at times willfully. The *reasons* for these failings, and his various motives at any point in time, may add shades of grey, but they don’t excuse his behavior towards Severus. Perhaps we see him at his worst with Severus. If you want to grant him that, I’ll go along with it. It’s these complexities that make characters fascinating to me - and I am fascinated by Lupin, even if I *like* him less and less with time.

I don’t mean to pick on Remus. None of the characters in the books are shining angels, Severus included. But I tend, personally, to point out the flaws in seemingly-blameless characters like Remus, and to emphasize the pain of those like Severus who are discarded by other characters, for a reason. If we go along with the bias that the narrative voice, and JKR’s pronouncements, encourage and tolerate or cover over failings like the one I’ve described because the characters are otherwise sympathetic to us, we fall into a trap that IMHO is very, very dangerous. The books encourage us (in behavior) NOT to think of other people as human beings unless we *like* them, or if they are close to us in some way. The people who might seem unpleasant - bitter, or pompous (Percy), or what have you - are shoved off to the side, and we are encouraged to distinguish between our & our friends’ pain (real, terrible, worthy of vengeance) and the pain of people we don’t particularly like (exaggerated, they need to get over it, they have no right to criticize US). When, IMHO, it is our human duty to at least try to put ourselves in other people’s shoes even for a moment, to respect a fundamental baseline humanity in every person. When a character fails at exactly this, and the narrative either whitewashes it or *encourages* us to go along with it, I hit the brakes. (And, obviously, go tl;dr on everyone. ;) ) It’s a common failing that I’m sure I’ve been guilty of myself, but when I am conscious of it I won’t tolerate it. And I see it in these books.

Which is why I’m not letting go of your argument. Not that you are consciously doing this, not at all. I understand that you sympathize with Remus, and have your own reading of the books - totally fine and your right. And maybe I’m taking it more seriously than you want to - I tend to get really serious about these things, maybe because I’m a lit student. :) But it seems to me that your argument is still...not really acknowledging the real failing that I see here, nor satisfactorily explaining away the evidence that leads me to see that failing. Really damning IMHO is Remus’ comment in the Shack, and the fact that in the scene before Severus *twice* drew his attention to the potion. Even with your argument that Remus wasn’t aware at first of Severus’ pain, after the potion incident he ought to have realized his failing and acted to change it (knowing and not acting being another kind of failure). But he didn’t. And even if at that point it was not a deliberate *refusal* to see, it was still a *failure* to consider - a passive fault rather than an active one, but very real nonetheless. I’m not asking Remus to be a mind-reader (at least, not anymore. I grant I hadn’t considered the years apart. But he still can be faulted IMHO for assuming rather than considering Severus’ possible POV.) I’m asking him to stop and think of Severus as a real human being for a moment, and act in consideration of that. Something I think every person has a duty to do towards others (and which just about every character in the series, Severus included, at times fails to do). Which Remus repeatedly fails to do. And...I don’t see how your argument acknowledges/gets rid of that lack of consideration here. Which is slightly frustrating for me - I feel like we’re talking past each other. :( Your arguments acknowledge that Remus has his flaws, but discount or explain away every concrete instance of those flaws, which makes the acknowledgment seem hollow.

So how about this, to be fair to you. If, after all this debating, I still haven’t convinced you....Why don’t you give me a couple of concrete instances in which you see Remus really, really failing? What are his worst moments, to you? And I mean tell me in detail - don’t worry about tl;dr. :) The things that you, personally, *can’t* bring yourself to explain away, make light of, or give him the benefit of the doubt on? You say (earlier) that Remus can be passive-aggressive towards Severus, just that the potions scene isn’t an example of it. So what WOULD be an example of it? Give me some real dirt. Convince me that we really do have two very different interpretations of the character, including where his real flaws are. If you don’t want to fill up the thread here, make a separate post or email me - moviemaedchen@gmail.com

If you want to, of course. Obviously this stops having a point when you start to not enjoy it, and I don’t want to wear you out. Sometimes (like Severus), I have a hard time letting go of something. ;) But I do genuinely enjoy debating with you, and if you haven’t convinced me of your reading in toto you’ve still made me consider things from different POVs, and taking more things into account. Which IMO any good debate should do, for all involved. It helps strengthen skill at reasoning, always a good thing, right? :) I thought the Lily thing went pretty well, am I right? I hope I’m not upsetting you, and that I haven’t slipped up somewhere and said something about you personally rather than your argument. I know you really don’t like that, and I can be sensitive that way myself, so I’ve done my best to keep it about the argument. Please correct me if I have - or if I have misunderstood you somewhere along the line.

Thanks for reading and responding to all this. Wow, tl;dr to the tenth degree. *sigh*
  • Re: part II

    Oops, I noticed I didn't reply to the second half of the post. Yes, Neville fears Severus more than anything else. But when Remus suggests he think of Gran Neville states he doesn't want the Boggart to turn into Gran either - the two are compared. Neville fears them to a similar degree, and more than all the other possible things he could fear. The example of the basilisk is irrelevant - nobody had the basilisk for a boggart; even Hermione who saw the basilisk fears something else more. And what does it mean that Ron fears spiders more than he fears, say, his own death, Ginny's death (something that was a realistic possibility for a few hours the previous year), getting himself killed by making an Unbreakable Vow with Fred, being killed by Molly for possibly blowing up his aunt, seeing a basilisk, Voldemort (of whose name Ron fears more than Hermione, for instance) etc?

    Also, look at what Boggart!Severus does: He is reaching inside his robes, presumably for his wand. Does Severus hex students except as part of a dueling lesson? Neville fears being hexed (or outright killed) by Severus for his incompetence in class because his own family members placed him in potentially mortal danger when his magic was late to kick in. His family conditioned him to expect being endangered in response to magical incompetence, leading to exaggerated fear when he is incompetent in a class given by a teacher who resembles Gran in his demeanor.
    • Re: part II

      (Anonymous)
      I'm just listing things that are, by and large, much more frightening than a mean teacher. Like Acromantulas (as Ron saw and was nearly eaten by in the last book, which I think is a fully legitimate fear), or giant snakes, or banshees. I don't think Neville fears his Gran to that degree; he wasn't the one who brought her up. Lupin mentioned her, and yes, he does say 'I don't want the boggart to turn into her, either', but it's not something that was foremost on his mind.

      That's also quite a lot of extrapolation about the boggart. He might have also been reaching into his robes for a vial of potion to poison him, too, which is just as legitimate given that Snape threatened to kill Trevor this way if Neville had failed to put together a potion.

      It's clear from later books that it is specifically Snape that Neville fears, as well. When he takes his Potions OWL Harry mentions that Neville had never looked so happy when working on Potions, and he did fairly well on the OWL despite his abysmal performance when Snape is present. The man scares him, even just standing in the room while Neville tries to work. That's not a healthy teacher-student relationship.

      - Chaos
      • Re: part II

        Yes, Neville fears Severus. And there is reason to think he was conditioned into that fear by the way his family treated him. Because between ages 6 and 8 Neville did have reason to fear for his life if his magic didn't kick in any time soon, and now he fears Severus would kill him if he didn't get his act together, despite the fact that Severus would never intentionally harm a student (in fact he is the teacher who does most to protect anyone in need). Neville's fear is exaggerated and unreasonable due to his background.
        • Re: part II

          (Anonymous)
          'never intentionally harm a student'

          I guess threatening to drug someone, verbally abusing them and in one case shoving them to the floor and throwing things at them doesn't count as 'harm' in your terms?

          'does most to protect anyone in need'

          I'll grant you that he does protect Harry, though it's only due to his obligation to Lily. But in general?

          night_train_fm
          • Re: part II

            I'll grant you that he does protect Harry, though it's only due to his obligation to Lily. But in general?

            Since we already went through this I'll just give chapter references to places that has examples of Severus protecting, trying to protect or showing distress at inability to protect people who aren't Harry:

            COS 11
            COS 16
            GOF 25
            OOTP 32
            HBP 15
            HBP 28
            DH 15
            DH 33
          • Re: part II

            Where in the books is Snape shown as shoving Neville to the floor and throwing things at him? Admittedly he does throw a jar at Harry in OotP, but I thought that was an isolated incident?
            Alison
      • Re: part II (another post for duj)

        duj was having problems posting. She asked me to post the following:

        Neville had a particular reason to put Snape at the top of his fear list in the Boggart lesson: it was the first DADA lesson after the incident in Potions where Snape had warned him that "at the end of this lesson we will feed a few drops of this potion to your toad and see what happens..." and immediately before dosing the toad, added, "If, as I don't doubt, he has done it wrong, his toad is likely to be poisoned."

        Chaos and others assume that Snape was *enduringly* Neville's worst fear, when perhaps he was only *transiently* in that position.

        duj
        • Re: part II (another post for duj)

          (Anonymous)
          Regarding Snape as Neville's fear: You say 'transiently', but you also mention that it was the very first Potions lesson. Of the first year. And yet two years later Neville is still most traumatized by Snape. If this had happened shortly after the attempted poisoning of his pet, then I would buy it was being a 'transient fear'.

          But two years later? And again, in his OWL year, when he was noted to perform significantly better at Potions when Snape left the room? Five years is not a 'transient fear', and it's very clearly not simply rooted in the threatened poisoning of his toad.

          Again; the fact that a teacher, at any point in time, is considered somebody's worst fear is a very bad sign.

          - Chaos
          • Re: part II (another post for duj)

            You say 'transiently', but you also mention that it was the very first Potions lesson. Of the first year. [...] If this had happened shortly after the attempted poisoning of his pet, then I would buy it was being a 'transient fear'.

            Umm... that's exactly what it was. The Potions lesson in question was earlier the same day, before lunch.
          • Re: part II (another post for duj)

            Oh, also: in the book this scene takes place in the staff room, and when Lupin led the class in there, Snape was sitting there (and got up and left). So Neville has just seen him again minutes prior to encountering the Boggart.
            • Re: part II (another post for duj)

              (Anonymous)
              Ah, sorry, I was misreading the original post, and my memory of books details has gone a bit foggy. My mistake.

              But see, here's the thing; when you say 'your worst fear', I don't think it means 'the thing that you happen to be scared of right at this moment'. Worst fear implies the thing that you fear the most above all else. It's the thing that, if you saw it, you would run immediately.

              Even if Neville was just frightened of Snape at the time, it shouldn't override his 'worst fear' as the thing the boggart turns into. Even if Neville himself had just been thinking about how terrified he was of Snape (legitimately so) and assumed that was his worst fear, he might have been proven wrong as the boggart delved deeper and found the thing he was truly scared of. And Neville, fairly obviously, was truly scared of Snape.

              But even that was the case, and he was so deeply horrified by the fact that Snape had threatened to poison his pet that his boggart was temporarily turned to Snape, that doesn't make the situation any better. Again; there should be no point in time where your teacher is literally your deepest fear.

              - Chaos
              • Re: part II (another post for duj)

                (Anonymous)
                Yes, but.

                I think that one of the differences here is that you're seeing Neville's fear of Snape as being all about Snape, specifically, and some of the other posters are seeing it as (at least potentially) a fear of something more profound, where Snape only plays one role in it.

                Take Remus' boggart, the full moon. That isn't about the *moon*, precisely; it's Remus' fear of his werewolf-ness. His boggart might, at other times, be himself changing into his wolf form, or a the body of someone savaged by a werewolf, or someone telling him that he'd bitten them and that he was no better than Fenrir... there are lots of possibilities. (The full moon was best-suited to the dramatic purposes of the scene.)

                So the question is: is Neville's Snape!boggart really about Snape? Or is it about his having insecurities regarding what people will do to him if he can't do magic? If it's the latter, then Snape certainly plays a role in those, but his grandmother and great-uncle have played even more of a role. Also, if it's the latter, then the recent threat to poison his toad would make it much more likely that Snape would appear than someone else who might also represent the same fear.

                And really, we can't *know* either way *exactly* what Neville's boggart is about, because the boggart doesn't say anything, or do much of anything, before turning into someone else's fears. So, it might be all about Snape. But it might not. Hermione's certainly wasn't all about McGonagall. Remus' isn't literally about the moon.

                Lynn
              • Re: part II (another post for duj)

                Again; there should be no point in time where your teacher is literally your deepest fear.

                Ahem. See Hermione's boggart. Bad Minerva!
                • Re: part II (another post for duj)

                  It's not Minerva that she's afraid of, though; it's failure. I think McGonagall is the one in this image because she's Hermione's Head of House. There may also be fear of disappointing Minerva specifically.
          • Re: part II (another post for duj)

            (Anonymous)
            Also, for that matter: performing better when your usual teacher isn't in the room isn't necessarily a sign of deep-seated fear.

            It isn't a good thing, but it isn't necessarily a sign that that teacher terrifies you. And I really don't think anyone here is arguing that Severus' teaching style was *good* for Neville, after all.

            (Heck, Neville could've been more relaxed at his Potions OWL just thinking that this might be the last time he'd ever have to make a potion in his life. What a relief that must have been for him!)

            Lynn
          • Re: part II (another post for duj)

            I agree Neville fears Severus at least until the end of Y5. We do not know anything about their interactions in Y6 when Severus teaches DADA. However we do not know if at any point but the Boggart lesson Neville fears anything or anyone else more than Severus. It is entirely possible that when he is at home he fears Gran more than he fears Severus. In fact, it is possible that whenever Neville does something that might disappoint Gran he fears her more than he fears Severus. It is entirely possible that once Bellatrix is broken out of Azkaban he fears her more than Severus. We don't know.

            Again; the fact that a teacher, at any point in time, is considered somebody's worst fear is a very bad sign.

            That depends. I feared teachers in general and one in particular at some point. I feared my parents a lot at many points. It's a matter of personality type. And with Neville's upbringing he was conditioned into fearing authority figures who considered him magically incompetent. So if the fear is a bad sign it is not necessarily for the reason you think it is.
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