In late December, 2019, I became aware of J.K. Rowling's bizarre "Sleep with any consenting adult who'll have you" Tweet, which marked, for me at least, the beginning of the Harry Potter author's rebranding as an irrational transphobe and hatemonger. In the annals of fandom, there had never been a case of an author so completely contradicting the core ethos and popular appeal of her work (i.e., don't listen to the grown-ups who want you to conform and tell you that you are a freak and should be ashamed; what is special about you is the source of your power, a power that just might save the world) in such few words.
Blurring the Boundaries between Text and Graphic, Word and Picture, Art and Culture
Saturday, August 12, 2023
A J.K. Rowling Transphobia Primer (A Good, Old-Fashioned Link List!)
Originally posted April 6, 2021; last updated August 12, 2023.
Below is a good, old-fashioned link list of the J.K. Rowling transgender controversy. I initially built this list for my college students who were reading Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (1999) as part of a "Coming-of-Age" literature class (they've also read Maya Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Alice Walker's The Color Purple, and Steven Chbosky's The Perks of Being a Wallflower, fyi). When I first started posting on the controversy, it seemed to many like only an intercene fandom happening, but the story has continued to have ramifications for the business prospects of the Harry Potter franchise, to say nothing of the real-world impact on the trans community. For my views, see other posts on this blog. - Donald E. Simpson, PhD.
Friday, December 16, 2022
Tri-Wizarding Transphobic Triennial: Three Years of J.K. Rowling, TERF Cult Leader
Friday, November 11, 2022
The Beginning of the End of J.K. Rowling
Warner CEO David Zaslav’s November 3 earnings call with investors has been widely heralded as great news for author J.K. Rowling, with headlines trumpeting “Warner’s Exec Doubles Down on Rowling,” and similar tripe.
This is completely erroneous.
Monday, September 5, 2022
Edie Ledwell Deserves a Better-Led Creator
Saturday, April 9, 2022
Fantastic Beasts and Other Unwritten Big, Fat Books
The biggest problem with the Fantastic Beasts film franchise, and it has been the biggest problem from the start, is that the films lack big, fat J.K. Rowling books to precede each film.*
Friday, October 1, 2021
J.K. Rowling: The King Lear of Kiddie Lit
Friday, October 16, 2020
Everyone’s Entitled to be a Muggle: The Aunt Petunia Defense of J.K. Rowling
Defenses made on behalf of J.K. Rowling break down into three basic arguments (or non-arguments, as the case may be). They are:
Sunday, September 27, 2020
Fans Didn’t Enable Rowling; Success, Ego, and Power Did That.
Friday, September 18, 2020
J.K. Rowling, Aging Face of a Zealous and Growing Ignorance Movement
Monday, July 6, 2020
Joanne, Jo, J.K. or Robert: Somebody Help Me Out Here...
It’s okay for Joanne Rowling to write novels under the pseudonym “Robert Galbraith”; it’s okay for her to obscure her gender using the made-up initials “J.K.” (she has no middle name); it’s okay for her to prefer the masculine-sounding nickname “Jo” over her feminine given name.
Sunday, June 21, 2020
“Who'll Have You, Freak?!”: J.K. Rowling and the Curse of Transphobia
“Who’ll have you” is a hateful putdown the author has used twice in the mouth of one of her most beloved characters and once in her own voice, the last cruelly directed at transgendered persons in the abstract.
by Don Simpson
Last December (2019), just before Christmas, I became aware of a
Tweet posted by J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, and the brouhaha surrounding it, that has
now become famous:
“Dress however you please. Call yourself whatever you like. Sleep with any consenting adult who’ll have you. Live your best life in peace and security. But force women out of their jobs for stating that sex is real?”
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
'S Prose, Not Superheroes: Recently Read Real Books
Here's a snooty selection of what I've read over the past year or so, in no apparent order:
Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling--I read all seven books and watched all eight DVDs in eight weeks in the summer of 2015. I'm a late adopter--having worked at Border's in the early 2000s and probably handled (conservatively) some 10,000 individual copies of the various HP editions through the end of 2005 as a part-time bookseller. I never read a single sentence at the time, being exclusively interested in non-fiction (which lead to me returning to college for a decade-long stint). But I've read pp. 317-421 of The Prisoner of Azkaban (the Shrieking Shack sequence) a total of eight times--it's the most brilliantly orchestrated piece of storytelling I am aware of in any media.