Fontaine
Overlord
★★★★★
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2017
- Posts
- 5,417
> the story of the Death Eaters: basically the story of the frustrated virgins club at Hogwarts, led by a sociopathic Chad who uses them for power (much like the Trump family uses ugly alt-right men right now)
> Peter Pettigrew: joined the dark side because of jealousy and bitterness over being ugly and low IQ
> Severus Snape: basically the story of a smart ugly boy (whose heart was irrevocably broken by a pretty oneitis)
> Rowling later expressed her regrets about making ugly Ron seduce Hermione, stating it was unrealistic
> Many direct and indirect references to lookism and the importance of looks in teenage dating, notably in the 4th and 5th tome
> Rowling often directly equates being handsome with high confidence and arrogance, and ugliness with low confidence (contrast between Snape and James, for instance)
> Rowling knows that looks are the most important thing on earth. That's why she uses the physical ugliness of racists to discredit racism, for instance in the 6th tome (degenerate heirs of Slytherin).
> She often insists on the "handsome looks" of Voldemort, both to explain how he could seduce people so easily, and as a way to show that even beautiful people can be evil inside
> Peter Pettigrew: joined the dark side because of jealousy and bitterness over being ugly and low IQ
> Severus Snape: basically the story of a smart ugly boy (whose heart was irrevocably broken by a pretty oneitis)
> Rowling later expressed her regrets about making ugly Ron seduce Hermione, stating it was unrealistic
> Many direct and indirect references to lookism and the importance of looks in teenage dating, notably in the 4th and 5th tome
> Rowling often directly equates being handsome with high confidence and arrogance, and ugliness with low confidence (contrast between Snape and James, for instance)
> Rowling knows that looks are the most important thing on earth. That's why she uses the physical ugliness of racists to discredit racism, for instance in the 6th tome (degenerate heirs of Slytherin).
> She often insists on the "handsome looks" of Voldemort, both to explain how he could seduce people so easily, and as a way to show that even beautiful people can be evil inside
Last edited: