Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone"
J.K. Rowling's "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" is the first book in a trilogy based on her child-wizard character Harry Potter. Rowling has created a world of wizardry and witchcraft that enchants both children and adults. Her story confronts good verses evil with larger than life mystical heroes and villains.
Harry Potter, the hero of Rowling's story, has been raised by his aunt and uncle, Vernon and Petunia Dursley, and their son Dudley. On his eleventh birthday he discovers that he comes from a long line of wizards and that his parents had been killed by an evil wizard named Voldemort. Harry also learns that he, too, is a wizard of renown and soon leaves for Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry to study the craft. It is here that the major portion of the story takes place.
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry is a castle-like building in the countryside outside London. It has towers and battlements that add a scary feel to the setting, much like the castles in horror movies. The school looks as if it belongs to another time and place. It has a mid-evil era feel to it, filled with secret chambers and unlit passageways. It is a magical and mystical place that is truly a world of its own.
Harry is a modest boy with green eyes and a scar on his forehead that resembles a lightning bolt. He has spent the first ten years of his life being neglected and mistreated by the Dursleys, while his cousin, Dudley, was spoiled and indulged. Even before Hagrid, the giant from Hogwarts, arrives, Harry knew he had special powers, he just didn't know what they were or for what purpose they served. Hagrid informs him of his past, that both his parents were powerful wizards....
Harry Potter The hero of J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series is a remarkably complex character for one that is crafted to relate to a young adult readership. In the first book of the series, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, which was renamed Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone for American readers only. As Davis points out, the too-intelligent or sophisticated sounding word "philosopher" might have put off American readers. The
D. Harry Potter has influence around the world as well, having been translated into dozens of languages. III. This influence has resulted in Rowling having received many awards and enjoyed substantial material success. A. The Harry Potter series has received numerous awards 1. Several book awards, including British Children's Book of the Year 2. Nomination for a Carnegie Medal 3. Hans Christian Andersen Literature Prize in 2010 B. Rowling became a billionaire 1. Gave away a lot
Instead of the author's context it is the reader's context that is examined from the feminist perspective […] It is not the intention of this paper to enter into an extensive discussion on the theoretical validity of these different viewpoints. Suffice to say that it is the less extreme and more open -- ended and integrative form of feminist critique that is considered to be the most appropriate theoretical trajectory
Harry Potter books, written by J.K. Rowling, are about a boy's coming of age. The young Harry Potter has to live in two worlds -- one the ordinary world of those without magical powers, and the other his newly discovered life as an emerging wizard of some importance. In the process, Rowling teaches important lessons about what is truly important in life. Rather than lecturing her young readers with didactic
With this connotation, Rowling is showing how our lives and geniuses can take on new adventures after our deaths through texts. Quote 2 Blake "The community is not given; it is made by the abilities and activities of all its members -- by the incompetent Neville Longbottom as much as by heroic Harry. Harry Potter isn't just part of Hewison's museum culture; he is revolutionary, a symbolic figure of the past-in-future
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone (1997) by J.K. Rowling (New York: Scholastic Press, 1997) What type of world does the author present to the child in this fantasy text? In this fantasy text, the author presents a completely self-contained, magical world, with its own rules, hierarchies, atmosphere, heroes and villains, schools, shops, banks, restaurants, etc. Here, individuals with special magical powers outside the "muggle world" of Harry Potter's aunt, uncle,
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