![]() ![]() Since the release of the first novel, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, on 26 June 1997, the books have found immense popularity, positive reviews, and commercial success worldwide. Major themes in the series include prejudice, corruption, madness, and death. A series of many genres, including fantasy, drama, coming-of-age fiction, and the British school story (which includes elements of mystery, thriller, adventure, horror, and romance), the world of Harry Potter explores numerous themes and includes many cultural meanings and references. The series was originally published in English by Bloomsbury in the United Kingdom and Scholastic Press in the United States. The main story arc concerns Harry's conflict with Lord Voldemort, a dark wizard who intends to become immortal, overthrow the wizard governing body known as the Ministry of Magic, and subjugate all wizards and Muggles (non-magical people). The novels chronicle the lives of a young wizard, Harry Potter, and his friends Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley, all of whom are students at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. All Sortings should be directed to that blog's ask or submit instead of this blog's ask/submit boxes.Harry Potter is a series of seven fantasy novels written by British author J. I have some things that aren't on AO3 posted here, but the AO3 is what gets updated, not that post. Feel free to drop a message in my ask or submit boxes! I have a job that involves working hours that are often long and/or weird, so I do run a queue - but I may disappear for a few days followed by a MASSIVE REBLOGGING SPREE. (Warning - this blog contains SPOILERS for all of my fandoms!)Ĭontent you'll see here includes Harry Potter, ASOIAF (Game of Thrones), The Hunger Games, The Dresden Files, Lord of the Rings, Firefly, Star Trek (especially DS9 and the novels), Fringe, Battlestar Galactica, the Star Wars EU, Jane Austen, and whatever else strikes my fancy, including pictures of pretty things, memes, and history-related stuff. That way, I can publish it to the subblog. (Again, I would request that if you submit a sorting or on anon ask and want it published, please do it on the pottermoreanalysis Tumblr - /submit if it won’t fit or you don’t want to worry about your ask limit /ask if you want to remain anonymous. ![]() I’m going to start going through and answering more Sortings on the pottermoreanalysis subblog in the coming days, then I’ll start trying to figure out Google Docs. Thus concludes my analysis of data from the Beta. (The same goes for Hufflepuff, but probably to a lesser extent.) The symbolism here follows the answer patterns. They’re concerned with doing the right thing. ![]() Meanwhile, Gryffindors are on the side of right. It’s also sinister and associated with Dark Magic - Slytherin. So left-ness is weird and creative - it’s Ravenclaw. One book I read about left-handedness said that left-handed people are more likely to be non-neurotypical it’s had connotations of evil for a long time, and everybody probably knows about left-handed kids getting forced to switch writing hands ~50 years ago in US schools.) Left-handedness (and the direction left in general) has associations with creativity, oddity, unusualness, and worse connotations (latin: sinistra, where we get sinister. For Hatstalls, ½ Ravenclaw/Hufflepuff stalls went each way the Gryffindor/Slytherin Hatstall to get this went right. ![]() Ravenclaws go left 14/20 times, 60%. On the contrary, Gryffindors go right 12/19 times, 63%. Overall, more people generally pick left than right I’m not sure why. This is one that is actually easy and well-distributed: Slytherin and Ravenclaw pick left, Gryffindor right, and Hufflepuffs are pretty evenly split on the whole left/right deal (7:6 for Hufflepuff.) ![]()
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