JK Rowling, the now-infamous author of the Harry Potter series, has been rightfully condemned for her stances on trans people and gender identity. But what are we supposed to do with her still-popular and influential books and the deep attachments we have to them? It would be easy to condemn Harry Potter and all its fans as neoliberal trash, but, as Lyta and her guests discuss, thatâs a reductive framing that doesnât address the complex ways that readers, not just authors, define literary works and their meaning.
In the latest installment of Art for the End Times, Lyta speaks with Jessie Earl and Aja Romano about fandom, the deep problems with the Harry Potter franchise, and how we handle âThe Death of the Authorâ in a social media era when the author is very much alive and spouting bigoted opinions. Jessie Earl is a writer, editor, producer, and host of the popular YouTube channel Jessie Gender, where she talks about âthe nuance in the nerdy,â focusing on âissues facing the LGBTQ community, transgender specific community, women, nonbinary and autistic folks as well as other social and political issues through and within geek topics, with an eye to the most vulnerable.â Aja Romano is a culture staff writer for Vox reporting on internet culture. For Vox, Romano wrote a widely shared piece titled âHarry Potter and the Author Who Failed Us.â
Pre-Production/Studio/Post-Production: Dwayne Gladden
Transcript
The transcript of this podcast will be made available as soon as possible.
Source: Therealnews.com