I have no idea if this was intended, but reading the chapter reminded me strongly of these twoposts.
On the one hand, it is possible that Harry has simply gone on to a level where Hermione cannot follow. This suspicion, naturally, is devastating to her ego, but it’s part of what she’s grappling with now. And that moment is completely part of the archetypal Nerd Journey—for a lot of us it happens in college. All our lives we’ve always been the smartest kid at school, but suddenly we go to a much bigger school and we’re confronted for the first time with the reality that we are maybe not the colossal geniuses our high school teachers and our parents always told us we were. We realize there is a level above our own. That moment can be very difficult.
But at the same time, as Hermione grapples with this realization, she’s wondering if she can go any higher, and she’s being told: No, because you don’t have the aura of destiny.
Of course this is a fantasy story, a world with magic, and there is a special prophecy that names Harry and does not name Hermione. But I think she’s right to object when Dumbledore and McGonagall refuse to give her the kind of help they’re giving Harry, merely because it’s not her name on the title of the story.
I have no idea if this was intended, but reading the chapter reminded me strongly of these two posts.
On the one hand, it is possible that Harry has simply gone on to a level where Hermione cannot follow. This suspicion, naturally, is devastating to her ego, but it’s part of what she’s grappling with now. And that moment is completely part of the archetypal Nerd Journey—for a lot of us it happens in college. All our lives we’ve always been the smartest kid at school, but suddenly we go to a much bigger school and we’re confronted for the first time with the reality that we are maybe not the colossal geniuses our high school teachers and our parents always told us we were. We realize there is a level above our own. That moment can be very difficult.
But at the same time, as Hermione grapples with this realization, she’s wondering if she can go any higher, and she’s being told: No, because you don’t have the aura of destiny.
Of course this is a fantasy story, a world with magic, and there is a special prophecy that names Harry and does not name Hermione. But I think she’s right to object when Dumbledore and McGonagall refuse to give her the kind of help they’re giving Harry, merely because it’s not her name on the title of the story.