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16th Nov 2017

Turns out, people who read Harry Potter are nicer than everybody else

Did you read it as a kid?

Olivia Hayes

This in interesting.

If you read Harry Potter as a kid (or adult), then you’ll know what there’s many wizarding worlds out there that include werewolves, mermaids, dragons, half-bloods, muggles and so much more.

And now, new findings from a research paper called The greatest magic of Harry Potter: Reducing prejudice, has found that reading the books “improves attitudes toward stigmatized groups (immigrants, homosexuals, refugees)”.

In the books, Harry and Co often aligned with minority groups, such as muggle-borns and giants, and so, made it the norm.

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JK Rowling even addressed it last year in a blog post, saying: “The expressions ‘pure-blood’, ‘half-blood’ and ‘muggle-born’ have been coined by people to whom these distinctions matter and express their originators’ prejudices.

“If you think this is far-fetched, look at some of the real charts the Nazis used to show what constituted ‘Aryan’ or ‘Jewish’ blood.

“I saw one in the Holocaust Museum in Washington when I had already devised the ‘pure-blood’, ‘half-blood’ and ‘muggle-born’ definitions and was chilled to see that the Nazis used precisely the same warped logic as the Death Eaters.

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And in the words of Albus Dumbledore: “You place too much importance, and you always have done, on the so-called purity of blood!

“You fail to recognise that it matters not what someone is born, but what they grow to be!”

Well said, Albus.

Topics:

Harry Potter