Skip to main content

Hero or Villain?

                   Some characters have the power to stay in the mind of the reader even years after being published, no matter how the character appears in the fictional narrative- a hero or an anti-hero. Narratives have that power to even turn the worst characters into the favourites of the readers. It is fascinating how the author, with a swift move of their pen can create such a wonderful, lively being just from their imaginations. Most often it might be the protagonist that captures the reader’s interest. But at certain unpredictable situations, the anti-hero, the villain is the one that takes the readers off their feet.

                Recently the world has seen many representations, rewritings and reinterpretations of such anti-hero characters. It has become a recent trend that the antagonists are given prominence and their characters are being glorified. This can be seen in works of literature or movies. Some of them are Hannibal Lecter from the movie The Silence of the Lambs, Sir Sandor Clegane (The Hound) in the Game of Thrones series by George R. R. Martin, Sawyer in Lost series, Snape in the Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling, Holden Caulfield from "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D. Salinger, so on and so forth goes the list.

            These characters might not embody the stereotypical features and characteristics of a protagonist, but at times, the suffering or the social conditions or stigma faced by these same antagonists might create a deeper empathy in the mind of the reader towards this grey character. Snape from the Harry Potter series is one such character that has created such a novel, totally different approach in my mind for the first time ever. And for this particular reason, Snape will remain my most favourite. His character is penned by J. K. Rowling as a morally grey, serious, malevolent one. But later on, as the story progress, we see the internal conflicts and the reason why Snape has behaved in such a manner. This might serve as a reason for why people who have hated on Snape in the first few books start to empathize with him by the end of the story. Snape, being in love with character Lily, the mother of Harry, was not able to bring the love to a “happily ever after” kind of love. He loved her, but was not even able to save her from death and this has haunted him his whole life.

            The scene in the text where we see an exchange of dialogues between Dumbledore and Snape that Harry views through the Pensieve that Dumbledore left him. This is where the most prominent dialogue of the work enters. To the question of Dumbledore, “After all this time?” Snape answers, “Always” while the patronus charm of Snape appears to be a “doe” which was same as that of Lily’s. This shows the reader the depth of the love and loyalty that Snape has always held in his heart for Lily. And for this reason, even when he hates James Potter, he protects Harry until his last breath. And the readers who have hated Snape from the first book in the series onwards find themselves being empathetic towards his character. They have this feeling that they were always wrong about Snape.

            But, like any interpretation this too have an extreme opposite end to it. Readers opine that only because of the reason that Harry is the son of James Potter, Snape shouldn’t have treated him so badly, without any humane compassion or empathy. He should not have exhibited his resentment towards James Potter to Harry. Such interpretations can be seen in many works of literature as well as movies. This is an intriguing area which makes the reader explore the works and the intricate complexities of the antagonists’ mind.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Happiness House?

     “I don’t take his money, though. I steal something better.”, “I take his brightly colored storybook and make it mine.” says Lakshmi, the thirteen-year old protagonist of Sold by Patricia McCormick, who lived with her family in a small hut on a mountain in Nepal, who was “sold” by her own father to a brothel house called the “Happiness House”, when one of the inmates, Harish or the David Beckham boy as she calls him, opens the world of books and letters for her. Upon reading the lines, one can discern the fervent yearning that emanates from this young girl's desire for education. Can a girl, who has been forced into prostitution after being “sold” by her stepfather, accomplish this goal?      “Happiness House”-see the irony? A place, where all her dreams were shattered, her body was seen as a mere commodity for sexual gratification, her “no hips” and “plain as porridge” appearance was cruelly treated by the men coming and going through the halls- named ...

Behind the Bars!

     As John F. Kennedy says, “The right of everyman is diminished when the rights of one man is threatened.” Human rights is a commonly discussed matter. There are institutions like The National Human Rights Commission of India, National Commission for Women, National Commission for Minorities and so on. These work to ensure that people are not denied their rights anymore, but there is a category of people we often forget who are also denied their rights. They are the one who are behind the bars, the prisoners who are in under trial jails. Prisons are important as they as the ultimate tenderness, as the curtailment of liberty, it has a way for the state to isolate those actors which pose threat to society and performs its part of the social contract of maintaining security. Prison life is an open secret, everyone has a vague idea of what happens in a prison but no one is sure and there is hardly any conversation about it. The four walls of a prison today serve double pur...