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Pure-Blood
Pure-blood is the term for wizards and witches who claim to be from families with purely magical heritage. Ok, so JKR describes most of these families as "dark" since they turn to dark magic in order to preserve their pure blood line. Now there are noble pure blood families who never discriminated against others (Potter family was one of those i think). My question is : What would you think of these families who try to keep their pure blood but not in a violent way. Just simply to preserve their tradition and heritage witch goes centuries back?
Would you see it as a bad thing?
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#2
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Re: Pure-Blood
The Weasleys were pure-blood. They weren't violent. And the Black family, not all were violent or prejudice. Look at Sirius, he ran away from home. Then there was his cousin Andromeda. she wasn't prejudice. there were several other Black family members who were blasted off the family tree because they didn't fit in.
We don't know about Dumbledore's family. We can guess they weren't pure-blood, but we don't know. There might have been other pure-blood families who weren't violent. |
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#3
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Re: Pure-Blood
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#4
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Re: Pure-Blood
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This is all reasonable. But you are forgetting that there are pure blood children who are not forced but simply reject to marry muggleborn. Example : Drako Malfoy. I am sure that even if he had a choice of getting married with anyone he wanted, he would choose pureblooded woman. I feel like it's not up to his parents there. But, again, is he bad for doing it? Nothing wrong, he can marry who ever he wants. ![]()
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#5
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Re: Pure-Blood
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#6
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Re: Pure-Blood
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Draco Malfoy is a perfect example. His parents don't have to explicitly forbid him to marry somebody who is not a pureblood. They have made their views about non-purebloods very clear to him. He knows that his parents would be horrified / distraught / furious if he were to marry Hermione (for example) - so he won't. Obviously Draco has also been indoctrinated by his parents and shares their prejudices against non purebloods - but even if he had rejected those biased views I doubt he would choose to completely defy his parents' wishes and risk his relationship with them. My point is that children of pureblood parents who feel very strongly about "preserving their heritage and tradition" are not really free to choose - even if their parents don't explicitly forbid them marrying non purebloods (unless they are willing to defy their parents and potentially completely break off their relationship with them. But how many people are as brave as Sirius in that regard?)
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#7
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Re: Pure-Blood
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#8
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Re: Pure-Blood
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The wizarding world didn't have its own nobility, so families like the Potters and Malfoys, while wealthy, were not nobles. Quote:
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Clearly, there are some wizarding families whose priorities are their claim to pureblood rather than their children.
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#9
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Re: Pure-Blood
The answer to whether it is a bad thing or not is dependent upon how the people who are choosing to maintain their purity are looking at their choices. On the one hand they are not being violent and are not doing anything intentionally to harm others or showcase their superiority. On the other hand they are being quite exclusionary and rejecting the a majority of humans as not good enough. Perhaps they do this subconsciously and without bad intentions. However on a certain level they are deciding that only a certain group of people is good enough for them to marry and that the people who do not fall into this category are not.
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#10
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Re: Pure-Blood
Andromeda and Sirius are not the only Blacks to be disowned, Sirius' own Uncle was removed from the Family Chart because he simply gave Sirius money and the Black who married into the Weasley family (Cedrella Black, who I'm guessing is Arthur's mother) was also removed. And others.
So it seems that even when Purebloods marry one another (Cedrella and Septimus) they can still be disowned, meaning for some families it isn't even enough to be pureblood but the right KIND of pureblood. |
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#11
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Re: Pure-Blood
I don't really think that it's a bad thing if the children want to marry purebloods, but if other people try to make them marry a pureblood, then it would be an arranged marrige, and i think that's wrong.
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#12
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Re: Pure-Blood
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It one is however forced to marry someone against one's will, this is no longer a matter of choice, obviously. So, as long as someone considers bloodline a relevant criteria for a choice in a spouse and chooses accordingly, I wouldn't have a problem with that. It's his/her prerogative. Just as it would be to choose someone without putting any emphasis on bloodline. Personally, I see the blood purity issue more of a cultural than a "genetic" issue, as it indicates a certain preference for an established culture and tradition imo. Like irl there are people who love to encounter and live among cultures and others who find it alien, it would be like that in the wizarding world. Like they say, it takes all sorts ... |
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#13
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Re: Pure-Blood
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![]() That being said, there IS a fine line between knowing your origins and being obsessed with them, and very often in HP we're presented with family lines (Malfoys and Blacks being two examples) where the 'purity' of the bloodline has become an end unto itself. It isn't about where they come from or who they should be proud of having in their history any more; it's become a way of elevating themselves above other wizards. When you reach that level of genetic prejudice, as it were, you can fit any other kind of prejudice in. It goes from 'not as good as we are' to 'not our kind, dear' to 'are they really anything like us at all?' As long as the hypothetical family or families in question kept a sense of balance about them, I wouldn't mind at all. Heck, I'm proud of being able to say my ancestors came from Ireland. But I'm not going to suddenly begin believving that the Irish are the only worthwhile human beings in the world and every other nationality is somehow less human. THAT's where the sticking point lies.
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#14
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Re: Pure-Blood
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As an old Norman aristocratic family, their real interest is - and always has been - belonging to the aristocracy. Before the Statute of Secrecy, that largely meant the Muggle aristocracy. Afterwards, it meant the self-proclaimed Wizarding aristocracy - i.e., the Purebloods. So while the point about the Malfoys elevating themselves above others is accurate, it turns out that they have different underlying motives than other Pureblood partisans. They don't believe so much in their blood purity as in their right to be aristocrats. And that is what they are protecting. If the world shifted, and they needed once again to make alliances and marriages with Muggles and Muggleborns in order to protect their social status, they'd do it in a heartbeat.
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#15
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Re: Pure-Blood
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It goes to show where priorities lie with the pureblood fanatics.Quote:
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The Malfoy opposition to Muggles and Muggleborns is genuine, according to Pottermore - it speaks of "unfeigned contempt" for Muggles who could not make them wealthier. Typical bigots, making exceptions where it suits them to do so. It doesn't mean they're not bigots, it means their bank balance and delusions of grandeur are more important than their prejudices.The Malfoys know all about PR - they pretend to be civilised members of society in public, while murdering and destroying lives in secret. Wonder how they geared that one up after DH, when they were exposed for what they were. Quote:
What does being pureblood have to do with oppressing and trying to harm Muggles and Muggleborns? How does that help their delusions of being aristocracy? One can be pureblood without being a rabid bigot as the Malfoys were. Quote:
I don't believe that Draco and Lucius were only pretending to support blood supremacy. I think that even when the Malfoy family associated with Muggles, they only tolerated the wealthy and influential Muggles who could benefit them. Pottermore states as much. When they no longer had a reason or need to tolerate even wealthy Muggles, they let their bigotry flourish.
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Last edited by FurryDice; August 2nd, 2012 at 12:42 pm. |
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#16
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Re: Pure-Blood
I don't think that being a pureblood family is inherently a bad thing, as long as the family has remained pureblood only because every time a marriage took place, it was between two people who were genuinely in love. I don't believe that parents should be able to interfere with their children's love lives based on something as petty as pedigree.
I've seen this sort if descrimination in the muggle world. One of my oldest friends has never been in a relationship because she's only allowed to date other Japanese descendants. Never mind that she's 24 and a 4th generation Canadian! Similarly, my sister's close friend was going to be shipped off to Romania on her 19th birthday to find a husband if she couldn't find a Romanian boy here. Thankfully she did.
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#17
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Re: Pure-Blood
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![]() Pic by julvett at deviantart http://julvett.deviantart.com/gallery/2984632 "Relationships are like glass; sometimes it's better to leave them broken than to hurt yourself trying to put them back together." Anonymous "Like this one time I sort of ran over this girl on her bike. It was the most traumatising event of my life and she’s trying to make it about her leg. Like my pain meant nothing." - Cordelia; Buffy the Vampire Slayer S1Ep11.
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#18
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Re: Pure-Blood
Just to be clear... I was not defending the Malfoys. I personally thought that the Pottermore content offered an interesting insight into the Malfoys - one that makes them actually look WORSE than the view provided by the books.
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I should have phrased it as "the only portion of Wizarding society that believes itself to be aristocratic - i.e., the Pureblood ideologues who believe in the supremacy of purity of blood." However, it was late, and I was on my iPad, and I had a million other things to do. So I really think we are on the same page regarding the diversity of Purebloods. My point was that the Malfoys glommed on to Pureblood ideology when it suited them to do so because the Pureblood ideologues were the only element of Wizarding society that proclaimed itself to be aristocratic. The Malfoys adopted Pureblood ideology, in other words, in order to preserve their aristocratic claims after the Statute of Secrecy made it more difficult for them to climb the Muggle aristocracy. Quote:
I'm discussing whether the Malfoys are truly "Pureblood" or not. I believe that you are discussing whether or not they are bigots. Of course I think they are bigots - whether they are trying to climb high in the world of the Muggle aristocracy (pre-Statute) or whether they are claiming a "natural Wizarding aristocracy" by nature of being "Pureblood" (post-Statute). Part of the point I was attempting to make was that Malfoy bigotry transcends the politics of the day. The Malfoys use politics to their own personal advantage. They are not averse to dealing with (or even marrying) Muggles when it suits their interests. Post-Statute, it did not suit their interests to marry Muggles, though it did apparently suit their interests to have business dealings with Muggles (something that I'm sure they don't want their associates in the Wizarding World to know about). Regarding the PR, though… the Malfoys currently present a "Pureblood" face to the world, even though (post-Statute) they marry Halfbloods at need. The "Pureblood" face is the PR I was referring to. As the Pottermore content indicates, however, they "eschew" the practice of marrying only Purebloods and actually do marry Halfbloods in the strategic effort to avoid becoming inbred. "Eschew" is a strong word. It indicates that they are highly conscious of the genetic pitfalls involved in marrying only Purebloods. In other words, they are not nearly as fanatical about maintaining the purity of their own Wizarding bloodline as they pretend to be. I'm sure that privately the Malfoys are well aware of the significant number of Halfbloods stabilizing their family tree. So no, I don't think they believe their own Pureblood PR - i.e., the PR that they themselves are descended from a line consisting of 100% pure Wizarding blood. But do they believe in Pureblood supremacy? I'm sure they do - for at least however long it suits Malfoy interests to believe in it. At bottom, the Malfoys are old Norman aristocrats who believe in all the rights and privileges afforded to the aristocracy and who believe that those who are not in their social class are beneath their contempt - whether they (the Malfoys) are operating in the Muggle or the Wizarding world. That particular manifestation of the aristocratic worldview is, in itself, a form of bigotry. Quote:
However, if it suited Malfoy aristocratic interests tomorrow to marry a Muggle or a Muggleborn, I think that the Pottermore material demonstrates pretty clearly that they would do it in a second.
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Last edited by ccollinsmith; August 2nd, 2012 at 11:01 pm. Reason: Misplaced parentheses |
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#19
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Re: Pure-Blood
I believe they would, as well. Their "Malfoys First" proponents at all costs, really. One might criticise this as selfish but it does reflect a family loyalty not that rare in aristocratic families. Bloodlines would be secondary for them imo.
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#20
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Re: Pure-Blood
It appeared from the info on Pottermore that purebloods really do marry non-purebloods because of inbreeding and all that junk and yes, it's been a few weeks since I've read the info, but I don't think it specifically said the Malfoys do this, although I'm sure in their line it's happened.
Yes, I think they're all about image. In a sense, they're the wizarding version of the Dursleys, except they have money. The Dursleys care about how they're presented to the outside world. The Malfoys care about their reputation. Perfect purebloods in their minds. As I see it, there are two types of Purebloods. We have those like the Malfoys and the Blacks where the image is that pureblood is the only way to go and everyone else stinks. They're the stuck up kind with their noses in the air, the ones who actually use the term "Mudblood." The other type is the Weasleys. They don't care about blood status. They befriend who they want to befriend no matter if he's got Muggle parents or Muggle grandparents or whatnot. They don't blast Muggle lovers and half-blood lovers off their wall. They're not embarrassed by family members who turn out to be Squibs or marry a non-pureblood. They're pureblood, but it's not that big of a deal to them. I reckon we've seen more of the latter than we know. For the first type they let you know they're pureblood. It's written all over who they are. With the second type since blood status isn't important it's not as easy to tell. Your blood status isn't written on your skin. You can't tell just by looking at someone. If you didn't know who Ron, Harry, and Hermione were you wouldn't be able to tell which is the pureblood, half-blood, or Muggle-born. The question SlyEd asked: Quote:
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