Just a little Snape musing...
Mar. 19th, 2005 02:55 pmHere’s the Urbane!Snape myth again. I don’t know, and we’re given no clue in canon. I simply don’t believe he’s a closet opera buff and spends his spare time humming along to great arias, or that he can quote Dante or Shakespeare at will.
It really made me think of something new. I've always been a bit apprehensive about fics where Snape quotes Byron and listens to Bach.
I think what really is happening is that giving Snape these "pretentious" hobbies is a way for an inexperienced writer to "shorthand" their characterization of him, because in just a sentence of quoting/playing classical music, they set him up (in their minds) as a certain sort of character, aloof, mysterious, educated, etc. It's a short-cut.
The thing is, the sort of character they're trying to develop is not canon. Snape is a pure-blood, and would most likely know very little, if anything, about the Muggle world (his matchbox comment notwithstanding). And I'm certain that most pure-bloods wouldn't want to involve themselves in any sort of Muggle-world scrutiny.
So authors who attempt this short-cut are really doing canon a disservice, when what they really need to do is discover what would make him an aloof, mysterious, and educated character in Rowling's world.
Just my little musing for the moment.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-19 08:03 pm (UTC)We don't know, but I tend to figure along the lines of pureblood crumbling manor type. And any Muggle stuff he did know about, yeah, he wouldn't proclaim for the Malfoys, etc.
The matchbox thing is curious though. I always wonder if it's an oversight, or if there's anything to it.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-19 08:05 pm (UTC)Me too. It bothers me. I do think it was just a slip up, but then again, who knows what Rowling is going to pull out of her head...
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Date: 2005-03-19 08:24 pm (UTC)*headdesks*
random tangent
Date: 2005-03-19 08:52 pm (UTC)Everyone knows it is Blue Oyster Cult!!!!
and Skid RowOh man butt rock Snape, I can't stop laughing! Eighteen and Life to Go!
You know what Billy Joel reminds me of? Did you ever see the sitcom Bosom Buddies w/Tom Hanks in drag??? Hahahahaha! What if Snape had to live in an apartment for women? And Ron is his roommate, because they're the only people to wear drag in canon.
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Date: 2005-03-19 09:08 pm (UTC)Re: o noes
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Date: 2005-03-19 08:47 pm (UTC)I wrote the Dante reading Snape, who never actually quoted him, and made his discovery of Dante an integral plot point, so I feel a bit persecuted here.
My excuse is that it was my first fanfic, before I knew all the cliche potential. My present incarnation has very little in the way of Muggle interests.
I'd still argue that my Dante reading Snape sounds a lot more likely than anyone else's tango dancer, wine connoisseur or baroque harpshichord player. Simply because I can see him reading as a leisure interest more than any other. The dancing nonsense I tend to just be wryly amused by, because it is clearly the product of a Rickman fanasist. He always has a frockcoat in such fics... I rest my case.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-19 09:02 pm (UTC)When I come across the first Snape fic where they stop to tango at a Shell station, I shall give new meaning to the term "cruel and unusual punishment". *nods*
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Date: 2005-03-19 10:03 pm (UTC)Oh, we all give into the urge in the beginning. TLS has a few cliches in it, oh yeah. Part of why I wish I'd waited a little while before I started actually writing it.
I think it's just part of the writing life...hell, just rewind a few entries on this page and you can see bizarre angst and Cat Sues, so there you go. :) Hope you don't feel too persecuted...you're a great writer, and your Dante-reading Snape was probably better than 95% of ffnet Snapes.
Oh, and I agree that Dante-reading Snape is a lot easier to envision than harpsichord player and wine-snob. Absolutely.
Though I'd love to see tango!Snape, privately. Very privately.
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Date: 2005-03-19 10:11 pm (UTC)Trouble is, from every BYA and Tea with the Black Dragon (where the tango is done well), there are spawned a gazillion poor copies that belong on the less complimentary LJ communities. Stories where he throws out the odd quote in the middle of a conversation (usually half naked) and the heroine simpers at his enormous, umm, intellect. ;-)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-30 12:32 am (UTC)My Snape does not drink wine, for goodness sake. He is very found of mead, ale and good bitter. Does not object to a bit of scotch, but just for medicinal purposes, mind.
But all the cigar sniffing, wine swilling, caviar stuff? No way- not on a teacher' salary!
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-19 08:52 pm (UTC)The thing is, there is canon evidence of wizarding folk being rather enthusiastic about Muggle hobbies and Muggle culture. We know Dumbledore enjoys bowling and chamber music (both Muggle versions, presumably) and Nicholas Flamel was an opera enthusiast (also, presumably of Muggle opera). I don't know how pure-blooded they are, but one could assume that Dumbledore is, at least, a pure-blood -- none of his many detractors, not even Malfoy or Umbridge or such people -- have ever taken up his blood heritage as a weapon against him.
The key is that certain aspects of culture need a critical mass of viewership and a certain type of establishment -- governmental or cultural -- to be able to flourish. The wizarding population is reasonably small, so small and hell-bent on individualism that establishments such as opera and/or orchestral music as separate from their Muggle counterparts seems unlikely. Similarly, poetry and theatre are niche genres; considering how few poets manage to make a name for themselves in our Muggle world, I don't see how there could be more than a handful of wizard poets, with an audience of ten avid readers each.
To make a tangent, consider how small the Hogwarts library is, compared to larger Muggle libraries. One would assume that since Hogwarts is the highest institute of learning in Britain, it would have as comprehensive a library as any such establishment can; yet, it never strikes me larger than the library of a medium-sized town. So if these are the quantities of books the wizarding world produces for the use of academia -- and some of these books are old; magical theory doesn't get re-prints every century ;) -- one can draw parallels to how few volumes of prose and/or fiction get published.
One would be tempted to make an analogy to gay literature. As a clearly delineated minority, gay and lesbian books often have their own shelf or section in any large bookstore, but the contents are small potatoes compared to the other sections. There is poetry, but not a whole lot of it; there is fiction and science and everything with a gay bent, but the numbers are small and the quality is, shall we say, variable. Granted, wizards are more insular and do not function as part of the Muggle society like the queer nation does, but the theory of minority literature still merits consideration: it is quite natural to supplement it with literature from the majority genres. I for one know that I couldn't exist on queer literature alone. So it is quite possible that even if wizards would want to keep to their own circles, to have any sort of cultural hobbies, they need to venture outside their little insular world.
Having said all that, yeah, I do agree that the Byron (why is it always Byron, BTW? Why not some Baudelaire? Much more Snape-ish) and the Bach are shorthands, or ways with which to elevate Snape from his clearly un-aristocratic roots. Sometimes, if used well, they do fit the character; often, they're glued-on characteristics written by writers who wouldn't know chamber music if it smacked them upside the head. However, I don't necessarily agree that such things are "pretentious" by nature, but then again, I'm an opera fanatic and opera fanaticism is often construed to be the height of pretension. ;)
(I hope that made some sense. Too little sleep, agh!)
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Date: 2005-03-19 09:38 pm (UTC)I don't know if Snape would go to one, but I see no reason for them not to exist.
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Date: 2005-03-20 12:11 am (UTC)Marianne
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Date: 2005-03-20 01:05 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 12:13 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 01:13 am (UTC)Though I must admit, once in a greeeeeeeeeeeeat while I like to see a bit of that...then it's right back to the Greasy Git.
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Date: 2005-03-20 01:28 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 01:32 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 01:43 am (UTC)On the one hand, I agree that "pretentious" Snape or urbane! Snape can be a lazy way to develop his character. It's also unlikely that a pureblood would grow up with access to Muggle art music, literature and fine art. On the other hand, the general pureblood prejudice could be a very good reason to have Snape reading Dante or listening to Bach. Perhaps a Bach-loving Snape is not an urbane!Snape so much as a subversive!Snape. That is, perhaps he took a secret interest in Muggle culture as a youth; just as he studied the Dark Arts, much to the disapproval of the righteous Marauders, perhaps he also dabbled in bits of Muggle culture, much to the disapproval of his family. That being said, I don't think it's very plausible to make Snape an "expert" in Muggle high culture. It would have been difficult for him to read the classics, listen to Mozart, become a Death Eater, and become a Potions master all in his youth! :-) But, Snape strikes me as someone who loves knowing things, particularly things others don't want him to know. If Muggle culture was taboo in his society, he might have sought it out secretly. Who knows ... if he secretly loved the Mudblood Lily (though I don't necessarily subscribe to this theory), why can't he have secretly loved Bach or Mozart? :-)
I'll admit that I began this post a bit defensively, thinking of my own Snape, but I've committed so many fic "sins" (my OFC's a very good example of a Mary Sue, I'm slow at updating, plot is out of control, etc., etc.) that I'm not a good example of how to develop the character well! :-) But, I have read some really interesting fics (I'm thinking of Deeble's current fic, What E'er Therein Is Promised (http://ashwinder.sycophanthex.com/viewstory.php?sid=9325)) that use Snape's knowledge of Muggle culture as part of the plot or character development. So, I guess I'm arguing that this doesn't have to be a short-cut, and in fact, if used well, it can be a way to create a more interesting character.
Again, hope you don't mind me posting here, and thanks again for such interesting thoughts! On a slightly unrelated note, I recently came across your advice to newbie fic writers ... if only you had written that 10 months ago when I started writing! :-) It's a great post.
Best,
Sophie
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 01:49 am (UTC)Anything, just about anything, can work, as long as it's written well.
On a slightly unrelated note, I recently came across your advice to newbie fic writers ... if only you had written that 10 months ago when I started writing! :-) It's a great post.
Oh, wow, thank you so very much! I loved writing it, really, and the response has been terrific.
Thank you so much for your reviews! It was wonderful to log in one day and see them all. I enjoyed them!
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Date: 2005-03-20 03:45 am (UTC)Mind you, I say this from the POV of being a teetotaller myself, so perhaps it's just easier for me to imagine a stressful situation in which one wouldn't reach for the bottle. But if Severus did drink alcohol, I would bet you anything it wouldn't be absinthe. I mean, it's green, for crying out loud! It's practically got a sparkler in it already.
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Date: 2005-03-20 05:16 am (UTC)As much as I would like to see him in silk boxers...I can't imagine him wearing them, really. And the wine thing...nope, can't see that either, though who knows.
I must admit, though, I do have a weakness for the absinthe-sipping Snape...it's so lovely...so fanon...hee!
And I don't think he'd be turned off by the color green, consummate Slytherin that he is...
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Date: 2005-03-20 04:56 am (UTC)1) I do not buy the claim that pureblood wizards will have nothing to do with Muggle culture. Another commentator earlier said this better than I ever could, but I do think this is one of those fanon notions that people start thinking are canon.
2) If Snape doesn't read fine Muggle literature or listen to Muggle operas (and I'm not saying he has to), then what *are* his hobbies? Me, I like to think he has an interest in geology. And cribbage.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 05:14 am (UTC)1) Yes, you are most likely correct, that there is no 100% isolation possible. I really think that most pure-blood wizards will avoid Muggle things on a general basis, but there probably is some cross-pollination somewhere.
To be honest, I was a little strident in my entry, and I never expected it to show up on
2) I'm not certain if he has any room for hobbies right now...too many extracurricular activities...but anything's possible. ;) He could be a fan of curling, for all we know.
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From:Matchbox quote
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From:So-Not_Urbane Snape
Date: 2005-03-20 07:38 am (UTC)I can see Snape possibly liking chamber music or knowing wine because he was introduced to such by a mentor (Dumbledore or Lucius), but he's so obviously not a 'refined' guy in the books -- he spits in public, among other uncouth habits.
Really, if I'm writing Snape, he likes beer, he follows Quidditch, and if he likes any music, it is songs that he can sing in the pub. He might have hobbies, but they will be 'earthy' ones in keeping with his probable background -- poor but pureblooded.
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Date: 2005-03-20 04:15 pm (UTC)Re: So-Not_Urbane Snape
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Date: 2005-03-20 10:20 am (UTC)Therefore, it is perfectly possible that Snape has been exposed to and understands Muggle Literature.
And it would be difficult to discover what makes him educated in the Wizarding World because you need a shared frame of reference with your readers as to what the significance of knowing about a particular text is. If you slip in a bit of Bach, both the author and the readers know what Bach is 'about'. If you slip in the well-known Wizarding author Bertie Shilling, that means nothing without long explanation and possibly inventing original poetry / snappy quotes to put into the text.
I think that original poetry is a much greater danger than a bit of misused Byron.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 04:11 pm (UTC)If you slip in a bit of Bach, both the author and the readers know what Bach is 'about'.
At least partially true, but it's still shorthand that is presently very much not present in Rowling's world, hence the original complaint about laziness, using literature/music to 'characterize' as opposed to actually trying to show it within the frame of reference of the Potterverse.
(no subject)
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Date: 2005-03-20 11:47 am (UTC)Snape is young for a wizard, has a fulltime job, and a past which doesn't suggest that he would have been interested in Muggle culture as a youth. Being well-versed into Muggle culture is more or less impossible. There are wizards in canon who seem to have taken an interest in Muggle culture, e.g. Dumbledore and Flamel, but those two have the advantage of being very old.
Another thing which bothers me is Snape who speaks as if he's got a thesaurus shoved up his arse. He has a way with words in canon, and I don't mind people using this in fics. If an author writes Snape speaking as if he's coming right out of the 19th century: back-button. Don't get me started on the overusage of wench and chit.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 04:27 pm (UTC)Amen. I once read a fic where Hermione was wandering around the castle, and she heard beautiful piano music coming from a room, and it was Snape, lost deeply in the music, playing something extremely difficult on the piano. I immediately hit the back button.
I have the thesaurus problem a little bit...I really had to remind myself to use contractions and be less wordy with Snape in the giantfic. I tried to scale back on it after I read an essay by someone online (most likely
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 06:47 pm (UTC)The biggest problem with music-connoisseur!Snape is that he's got no way to *listen* to music. Somehow I just doubt he's got a CD player, or even a phonograph, in his quarters in the dungeon (movie!Lupin's notwithstanding). I also balk at fics where he has perfect idea of how to dress to blend into the Muggle world, and of course wears something so flattering that every nearby jaw drops. If he ever goes there (and he may have legitimate reason), either he dresses badly or someone else gives him something to wear. Imagine just what Dumbledore would put him in. ;-)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-20 07:43 pm (UTC)I don't know if I'd agree with this. I have a pretty specific view of canon!Snape and it does not involve philosophy...he is rather underdeveloped in certain areas, especially if you consider how he holds a grudge for so long. I view him as being limited in some ways. But that's just my opinion.
As far as books go...I can see him voraciously reading anything having to do with potions...or the Dark Arts...or Defense...I'm not certain that he views books with the nostalgic view that we do. I think he views them as a tool.
Of course, this is all speculation.
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Date: 2005-03-20 09:26 pm (UTC)Though I do tend to think he comes from a lower-class Pureblood background, I can deal with a Snape who's interested in just about anything, Muggle or Wizard, as long as there's some sort of rationale for why and the author knows something about the subject (and it isn't taken to ridiculous extremes.)
I've seen him written as spouting Latin fluently and incessantly, for example, which I thought was a bit over-the-top; but using one carefully-chosen phrase here or there? Sure. (Docet Minervam (http://www.astronomytower.org/authors/reellifer/DM.html) is a lovely example.) Latin is the primary spellcasting language used in the books, after all, so I imagine most wizards raised in the society have at least a passing familiarity with it. Likewise, absinthe wouldn't necessarily be an unreasonable subject for a Potions Master to have investigated, and Shakespeare is so well-known throughout the Western Muggle world that I have a hard time believing most wizards don't at least know the name. My general rule of thumb is that the more widely known, useful in a non-technological way, and/or just plain nifty something is in the Muggle world, the more likely it is to have bled through into wizarding culture to some extent. And snooty purebloods are just as prone to guilty pleasures as anybody else, if not more so.
I've written Snape as being familiar with Tolkien, not because he's widely read in Muggle literature or pop culture, but because I imagine some of the underlying themes would speak to him; he probably confiscated a paperback from some Muggleborn student, picked it up in a moment of boredom, and got hooked.
I'll confess I do fall prey to the Severus-the-walking-thesaurus syndrome at times. It's fun to haul out all those long pretentious words I never get to use and let him play with them, darn it. :) And as much as he seems to crave respect and recognition, I could see him working hard to shed the stigma of his working-class background in any way he could, including building an impressive vocabulary. So even if it isn't altogether canonical, I don't mind so much seeing him written that way.
Frankly, I often find canon!Snape somewhat bland compared to the aggregated fanon version. He occasionally leaves me scratching my head, wondering how we've managed to extrapolate such a fascinating personality from, well...a surly, spiteful wanker stuck in a state of arrested adolescence. :)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-21 01:57 am (UTC)And the thesaurus problem...I have to constantly remind myself to tone his language down...I always want to make him sound extremely wordy...it's hard! :)
And you are absolutely correct...I like my canon!Snape with a touch of fanon!Snape or he's just a bit too limited.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-03-21 02:44 am (UTC)Of course, on the other hand, Arthur seems to have no idea of what matches are actually used for.
*shrugs and slinks back into obscurity*
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Date: 2005-03-21 02:46 am (UTC)