I'd have to reread-- how much of the angsting was from teenagers who grew up among muggles?
Do the adult wizards seem calmer about their looks than adult muggles?
ETA: I didn't mean muggles, I meant humans in the real world.
The weirdest thing about the HP books is that they're insanely popular while portraying a world in which people (you and everyone you've ever known) are consistently viewed as inferior.
I don't have any reason to think this is a bad thing, but it's very strange considering the usual human preference for self-congratulation.
By reading about high-status people, you pretend you're high-status too. Fiction is escapist. Nobody empathizes with the Muggles in HP - they identify with Harry, or Hermione, or Ron or another Wizard.
ETA: There is now a third thread, so send new comments there.
Since the first thread has exceeded 500 comments, it seems time for a new one, with Eliezer's just-posted Chapter 33 & 34 to kick things off.
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