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by Tabouli
[NOTE: This essay was written before the release of
book five and is not longer
accurate; it is archived here as a matter of interest]
"You don't know how weird it is for her to be this shy. She never
shuts up normally--"
-- Ron Weasley to Harry Potter
(CS3)
What about Ginny? Although she figured
prominently in the plot of CS,
everything she did happened "off camera" and she didn't really show up until
her One Big Scene at the end. Who is she really? Is she just an "extra" or
simply a stereotype, thrown in for decoration or for laughs?
Certainly at the start of the series she seems to have a serious case of
"baby of the family and only girl". A very young ten, probably from being
home-schooled and having all those big brothers being alternately
overprotective and teasing, plus a mother who wants to keep her little girl
little and does things like keeping her away from scary sections of the
pyramids on their trip to Egypt
(PA1) (I mean: she's twelve.
Think of the things her ickle Ronniekins
saw at the age of twelve and coped with!).
Now, to pre-empt accusations of me "hating
Ginny" let me say that I like the girl
well enough. It's not her fault she's been so sheltered. She's sweet and
kind and loyal, she can keep secrets, and yes, she has grown up quite a bit,
but from all we've seen of her in the first four books I think she has a lot
more growing up to do to win Harry's
respect, let alone be strong enough to be his rock if he and his world falls
apart (which, if he survives the series, looks quite possible).
If Harry should turn out to need a rock,
I think Hermione would be a
better candidate for the job. Harry
respects and trusts Hermione,
and has already leant on her for support and emergency assistance in times of
crisis. At eleven, Hermione is
already strong, smart and assertive, even if she's socially insecure and her
self-esteem hinges on her academic achievements. Of course, I don't think
being Harry's "rock" in any way
means she would be a stand by her man sidekick who can't achieve things in
her own right. People can play a supporting role in their partners',
children's or family members' lives without sinking their own lives for the
other party's sake, and we know
Hermione can definitely cope
with a lot on her plate.
Back to Ginny. Why does
Ginny develop a crush on
Harry? For the same reason little girls
develop crushes on Prince William and other boys they know nothing about...
because he's Famous! She's a groupie! Given that
Harry doesn't like playing the celebrity
and feels very uncomfortable when people stare at his scar or try to pull him
unwillingly into the limelight like
Lockhart, he's hardly likely to warm
to someone who fancies him primarily because he's famous. In
GF22, he even specifically
recognises that girls only want to go to the Ball with him because he's a
Triwizard Champion, and doesn't like
the idea (though he could probably cope if it were
Cho!).
Ginny's luckier than most groupies, of
course: at the start of CS she
actually gets to meet Harry properly, and learns that he is nice as well as
famous. Sadly, however, she's far too bashful to actually have a conversation
with him (not a good start to a prospective relationship: power imbalance,
for a start). She's hopelessly shy and embarrassed around him and also causes
him a lot of embarrassment, albeit unintentionally, by hovering around
Hagrid's hut (reminiscent of
groupies hanging around backstage to meet their idols), sending him an
annoying singing get well card, and humiliating him in public with that
Valentine's Day card (though
there's some debate about whether this was actually her). All very loyal and
devoted, like her stand against Draco on
his behalf in CS4, but hardly
the way to get Harry to respect her and
take her seriously, especially not at his age (embarrassing a teenage boy,
especially one like Harry, not being a
good recipe for making him
fancy you).
Then we have the Yule Ball business. Some HP fans have argued that
Ginny dealt with her lost opportunity to
go to the Ball with Harry in a very
mature way, on the grounds that she didn't burst theatrically into tears and
try to guilt trip him. I agree that this is an improvement on elbow in the
butter... at 13 her emotional control (aka Stiff Upper Lip) is certainly
coming along nicely. All the same, I think this is an English thing... the
last thing an embarrassment-prone English family like the
Weasleys would produce is a daughter
who would sob in public and try to blackmail someone into liking her if she
could possibly help it. More likely she would force a brave smile to hold in
the tears, make some excuse, and then flee to a bathroom so no-one saw her
being emotional! She has grown up, but I don't see her reaction as evidence
of incredible new depths of strength and maturity myself. (Now, on the other
hand, actually asking Harry to the Ball
herself would have impressed me).
Interestingly, JKR implies that Ginny has
become close to Hermione behind
the scenes in GF, though I don't
think this bears much on the maturity and strength debate. I get the
impression that Hermione, with
her two male best friends, must sometimes crave a female friend to talk to
about the girlier things they would scoff at (like what to wear to the Ball
and who to take, relationships,
Love Potions with
Mrs Weasley...!), and has bonded with
Ginny in that department. We don't know
much about this friendship, though it would be interesting to hear more.
Surely if Ginny and
Hermione have become friends
on a girly-bonding level, an absolutely mandatory topic of conversation is
Which Boy They Like! Given that Harry is
one of Hermione's best friends,
how could Ginny (whose longing to talk
about her crush on Harry almost killed her
via Riddle's diary) not have talked
to Hermione about her undying
love for Harry? Wouldn't she surely ask a
close female friend who sees so much of
Harry whether there was any hope, how can
she get him to notice her as more than Ron's
baby sister, what sort of girls does he like, does he ever mention her,
and so on?
Then there's Hermione's role
in the friendship. It certainly appears that
Hermione has discussed boys
with Ginny to some degree, as
Ginny knows and steadfastly keeps quiet
the knowledge that Krum has a thing
for Hermione and invited her
to the Ball. Might Hermione
also have shared the one piece of information fans would dearly like to know...
which boy of Ron and
Harry she is most attracted to?
Now the plot thickens. Does Ginny know
that Ron is interested in
Hermione? If she does (as well
she might if she's kept her eyes and ears open), mightn't she have asked
Hermione whether she has any
interest in her brother? No doubt she'd keep the answer to herself if so, but
all the same, the thought is intriguing. If
Hermione does
fancy
Ron,
Ginny, a trustworthy and good-hearted girl,
would surely be able to provide some discreet help in getting her close
female friend and brother together.
On the other hand, the plot is even thicker if
Hermione fancies
Harry! Knowing of
Ginny's infatuation, what would
Hermione do? Somehow, I can't
see Hermione confessing to
Ginny and founding a miniature
Harry Potter fan club. I think her most
likely action in this case would be not to tell her, focus on the
Krum situation and remain neutral
and non-committal about Ron and
Harry ("No, we're all just friends"),
rather than wrack poor Ginny with anguish
and jealousy by telling her that she wants
Harry too (and gets to see him every day,
etc.etc.). Not to mention the implied rejection of
Ginny's brother. The only difficulty with
this is that if things were to develop between
Hermione and
Harry, this could put serious stress on
Hermione's friendship with
Ginny...
Ginny might well feel hurt and betrayed
to find that her confidante about Harry
had run off with Harry herself!
Of course, it's also quite likely that
Hermione, being inexperienced
and naive in the relationship department, hasn't figured out her own
feelings with regard to Krum,
Ron and
Harry at this stage. The idea of boys
finding her attractive is novel at this point, and it may take a while for
her to sort out feeling flattered, feeling friendship and feeling attracted
into clear enough categories to develop a definite interest of her own.
© 2002 by Tabouli (F. Price), used by permission
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