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My reaction to finding out that Snape was a Capricorn instead of a Scorpio:
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...
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Er, was I supposed to care about this?
Sorry, I've just never had the slightest interest or confidence in astrological signs as a means of personality determination. I don't think I even bothered to decide when D&L Snape's birthday was, since it never came into any of the stories. Besides, if Snape were a Scorpio, as many people sincerely believed suited him to a T -- dude, that would make him the same sign as Kalan Porter (you knew I had to get a reference in there, didn't you?). Any astrological sign which can encompass both those personalities is so vague as to be completely useless, if you ask me.
Speaking of Snape, I've heard rumours -- I'm so out of the loop these days -- that Snape is "really" completely obsessed with his own selfish ambitions to the exclusion of all else, and that he is "really" evil or at least completely amoral and only prepared to support whichever side appears to be winning at the time. *yawn* Sorry, but I seem to recall having this discussion around the time PoA (the book, not the movie) came out and it didn't interest me much then either. JKR will let us know what's really going on in Severus's mind in good time, I'm sure. In the meantime, there are perfectly good canonical reasons to believe that he is not entirely self-interested, and the game of "My Snape Is More Canonical Than Yours Because He's Meaner" smacks of pettiness and wishful thinking to me.
Personally, I'll take any Snape who appears to look, speak and behave similarly to the way he does in canon, and where any obvious deviations from canon are noted and intelligently addressed in the context of the fic. I'm tired of Snapes who are sekritly beyootiful, expert oenophiles, and own sprawling manor houses to which they invite a host of wide-eyed Mary Sues (Hermione!Sue very much included) -- but I'm also tired of Snapes who are actually more vicious, selfish, and flagrantly amoral than I've ever seen Snape behave in canon. Oh, and Snape is not a dribbling psychological mess, either. He certainly has Issues, but if he really had all the Issues that some fic writers foist upon him, the guy would never get anything done because he'd be curled up in a corner in the St. Mungo's psych ward somewhere, gibbering.
My Snape, for the record, was born and raised a perfect gutter-snipe (snape?). After years of teaching at Hogwarts he's no longer desperately poor, but he's careful with the money he does have and is not inclined to spend it on indulgences -- except perhaps, in his younger and more nervous years, the occasional cigarette. He is on good terms with McGonagall and respects Dumbledore: though he is fully conscious that neither of them is perfect (Dumbledore especially can get on his nerves), he nevertheless appreciates what they have done for him. He has perfectly rational reasons (based on his somewhat limited knowledge) for disliking Harry and bullying Neville, but deep down he also enjoys being nasty to them and doesn't find it much of a stretch. However, he also has enough of a conscience to know that this is not the way he ought to behave, so he can't even get enough enjoyment out of it to make it worthwhile. This makes him extra cranky, so it's a bit of a vicious cycle.
He adds grease to his hair (which also tends to be naturally greasy and lank to begin with) to lend credence to the illusion that he is still in every respect the same as he was in his Death Eater days. But really, it's all because Sirius Black mocked his appearance when he first came to Hogwarts, and at that very moment Severus Snape gritted his eleven-year-old teeth and swore that he would never, ever, ever change the way he looked lest he give Black the satisfaction of thinking he'd won. Now that the odious Black is dead this isn't so much of an issue, but he still thinks it isn't a good time to go drawing attention to himself through even a minor change in his habits and appearance, so the grease and the yellow teeth (leftover from the old pack-a-day habit) remain.
Even underneath the grease he is not classically handsome. He is not handsome at all, in fact. His only beauty (if it can be called that) is his voice, which he carefully trained out of its original uncultured accent and has polished smooth through years of practice. He does not go around wooing the female populace with it, however, even if he thought any of them would pay him the slightest attention (or that they would be worth his attention in return). He prefers to keep The Voice for the purpose of menacing his students and cowing weaker adults into submission.
I've already written a lengthy essay about the question of Snape's redemption, and a number of stories about the possibility of him having a successful romantic relationship, so I won't bother repeating any of that here. Basically, if my view of Snape is deemed hopelessly romanticized and uncanonical in certain quarters, no skin off my nose. Those who enjoy the stories I write will go on enjoying them, and those who don't are perfectly free to move on and seek out the kinds of stories they do like.
...
...
...
Er, was I supposed to care about this?
Sorry, I've just never had the slightest interest or confidence in astrological signs as a means of personality determination. I don't think I even bothered to decide when D&L Snape's birthday was, since it never came into any of the stories. Besides, if Snape were a Scorpio, as many people sincerely believed suited him to a T -- dude, that would make him the same sign as Kalan Porter (you knew I had to get a reference in there, didn't you?). Any astrological sign which can encompass both those personalities is so vague as to be completely useless, if you ask me.
Speaking of Snape, I've heard rumours -- I'm so out of the loop these days -- that Snape is "really" completely obsessed with his own selfish ambitions to the exclusion of all else, and that he is "really" evil or at least completely amoral and only prepared to support whichever side appears to be winning at the time. *yawn* Sorry, but I seem to recall having this discussion around the time PoA (the book, not the movie) came out and it didn't interest me much then either. JKR will let us know what's really going on in Severus's mind in good time, I'm sure. In the meantime, there are perfectly good canonical reasons to believe that he is not entirely self-interested, and the game of "My Snape Is More Canonical Than Yours Because He's Meaner" smacks of pettiness and wishful thinking to me.
Personally, I'll take any Snape who appears to look, speak and behave similarly to the way he does in canon, and where any obvious deviations from canon are noted and intelligently addressed in the context of the fic. I'm tired of Snapes who are sekritly beyootiful, expert oenophiles, and own sprawling manor houses to which they invite a host of wide-eyed Mary Sues (Hermione!Sue very much included) -- but I'm also tired of Snapes who are actually more vicious, selfish, and flagrantly amoral than I've ever seen Snape behave in canon. Oh, and Snape is not a dribbling psychological mess, either. He certainly has Issues, but if he really had all the Issues that some fic writers foist upon him, the guy would never get anything done because he'd be curled up in a corner in the St. Mungo's psych ward somewhere, gibbering.
My Snape, for the record, was born and raised a perfect gutter-snipe (snape?). After years of teaching at Hogwarts he's no longer desperately poor, but he's careful with the money he does have and is not inclined to spend it on indulgences -- except perhaps, in his younger and more nervous years, the occasional cigarette. He is on good terms with McGonagall and respects Dumbledore: though he is fully conscious that neither of them is perfect (Dumbledore especially can get on his nerves), he nevertheless appreciates what they have done for him. He has perfectly rational reasons (based on his somewhat limited knowledge) for disliking Harry and bullying Neville, but deep down he also enjoys being nasty to them and doesn't find it much of a stretch. However, he also has enough of a conscience to know that this is not the way he ought to behave, so he can't even get enough enjoyment out of it to make it worthwhile. This makes him extra cranky, so it's a bit of a vicious cycle.
He adds grease to his hair (which also tends to be naturally greasy and lank to begin with) to lend credence to the illusion that he is still in every respect the same as he was in his Death Eater days. But really, it's all because Sirius Black mocked his appearance when he first came to Hogwarts, and at that very moment Severus Snape gritted his eleven-year-old teeth and swore that he would never, ever, ever change the way he looked lest he give Black the satisfaction of thinking he'd won. Now that the odious Black is dead this isn't so much of an issue, but he still thinks it isn't a good time to go drawing attention to himself through even a minor change in his habits and appearance, so the grease and the yellow teeth (leftover from the old pack-a-day habit) remain.
Even underneath the grease he is not classically handsome. He is not handsome at all, in fact. His only beauty (if it can be called that) is his voice, which he carefully trained out of its original uncultured accent and has polished smooth through years of practice. He does not go around wooing the female populace with it, however, even if he thought any of them would pay him the slightest attention (or that they would be worth his attention in return). He prefers to keep The Voice for the purpose of menacing his students and cowing weaker adults into submission.
I've already written a lengthy essay about the question of Snape's redemption, and a number of stories about the possibility of him having a successful romantic relationship, so I won't bother repeating any of that here. Basically, if my view of Snape is deemed hopelessly romanticized and uncanonical in certain quarters, no skin off my nose. Those who enjoy the stories I write will go on enjoying them, and those who don't are perfectly free to move on and seek out the kinds of stories they do like.
Tags:
- characters,
- essays,
- hp,
- snape,
- theories
no subject
Date: 2005-01-10 04:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-10 05:05 pm (UTC)BTW, I have watched the Alias premiere now. My husband's reaction was one of mild curiosity followed by profound boredom. My reaction was one of, "I see, he's rebooting the series to take it back more or less to where it was before the ABC monkeys started messing with it," but I found it hard to get very excited about the prospect (or indeed, anything to do with the episode). One of my main hurdles was the idea that all these important players -- Sydney, Vaughn, Jack, Dixon and finally Marshall -- would all quit the CIA or otherwise drop off the radar at the same time and Weiss wouldn't notice something was going on. Uh-huh. Either he is the Worst CIA Agent Ever, or he is secretly really PO'd with the whole lot of them right now for leaving him out.
Also, the whole Irina thing? I don't believe a word of it. Surely there was some more plausible, in-character way to write her out than that. I don't even have the desire to write that Jack/Irina ficlet any more. *prods dead bunny gingerly with toe*
I think this season I'm just going to keep tabs on what my flist and the TWoP spoiler forums have to say about the show, and if I hear about something I particularly want to see, I'll download the episode in question. But follow it every week? Probably not.
no subject
Date: 2005-01-10 05:27 pm (UTC)And I am pretty sure that Weiss will catch on, sooner rather than later, but that he's far too good an agent to prod their cover stories too hard. The only reason I'm not 100% sure he knows right now is that both Sydney and Vaughn's absences do make a lot of sense, and I don't know how much Weiss works with Dixon and Jack without them.
Ergo, I think it's full of promise, and am very, very happy with the show.